This Is a Flashlight That Doubles as Self-Defense
At 3000 lumens, this flashlight doesn’t just illuminate — it temporarily blinds. Aim it at someone’s face in a dark parking lot and they can’t see anything for several seconds. That’s your window to move, call for help, or deploy another tool. Add in the aluminum alloy body that works as a striking tool, the strobe mode that disorients, and the zoomable beam that goes from spotlight to floodlight with one motion, and you’ve got the most versatile safety tool in the lineup.
Who This Flashlight Is For
Security professionals who need a high-output light and a deterrent in one tool. Night-shift workers who walk to their car in dark lots. Dog walkers and joggers who want something that lights the path and doubles as protection. Anyone who carries a flashlight and wants one powerful enough to be genuinely useful for self-defense. If you’re only going to carry one tool, this is a strong argument for making it a flashlight.
Is This the Right Choice for You?
Choose this flashlight if you want:
- Blinding 3000-lumen output that doubles as a defensive tool
- Zoomable beam for versatility from tight focus to wide flood
- Rechargeable battery so you never scramble for disposable cells
Consider something else if you need:
- A smaller, pocket-sized light — this is a belt-carry flashlight
- A dedicated stun device or pepper spray — this is a flashlight first, defense tool second
Why 3000 Lumens Matters
Most phone flashlights put out about 40-60 lumens. A decent household flashlight does 200-400. At 3000 lumens, you’re in a completely different category. In a dark environment, aiming this at someone’s face causes temporary flash blindness — their pupils are wide open in the dark and suddenly flooded with intense light. The strobe mode makes it even worse, causing disorientation and making it nearly impossible for them to track your movement.
The zoom function lets you adjust the beam. Pull back for a wide flood when you’re lighting up an area or walking a trail. Push forward for a tight, concentrated beam when you need to identify something — or someone — at a distance. One-handed operation, smooth adjustment.
Quick Comparison: How Does a Tactical Flashlight Stack Up?
| Feature | Tactical Flashlight | Stun Gun Flashlight | Phone Flashlight | Regular Flashlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brightness | High-output LED ✓ | Moderate ✓ | Low | Moderate |
| Strobe/Disorientation | Yes — defensive strobe ✓ | Some models | No | No |
| Durability | Aircraft aluminum ✓ | Durable housing ✓ | Fragile | Varies |
| Dual Purpose | Light + strike bezel ✓ | Light + stun ✓ | Light only | Light only |
| Best For | EDC, patrol, security | Defense + illumination | Casual use | General use |
Practical Details
Aluminum alloy construction in black, measuring 6.22 by 1.61 by 1.33 inches. Weighs 0.85 pounds — substantial enough to feel like a tool, light enough for belt carry. Five modes: high, medium, low, strobe, and SOS. Rechargeable lithium battery with USB cable included. Belt clip and wrist strap for secure carry. 1-year warranty from Safety Technology.
Three thousand lumens, rechargeable, zoomable, and built like a weapon. The flashlight that does more than just light things up.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does the battery last on high mode?
At full 3000-lumen output, expect a few hours of continuous use. Lower modes extend battery life significantly. The rechargeable lithium battery charges via USB, so you can top it off from a car charger, computer, or wall outlet. Keep it charged and it’s always ready.
Can I really use a flashlight for self-defense?
Absolutely. At 3000 lumens, the light itself is a defensive tool — temporary blindness gives you time to escape. The strobe mode adds disorientation. The aluminum body works as a striking tool in a worst-case scenario. Security professionals and law enforcement carry high-lumen flashlights for exactly these reasons.
Is the zoom easy to operate under stress?
Yes — it’s a push-pull mechanism on the head of the flashlight. Push forward for tight beam, pull back for wide flood. One hand, one motion. No buttons to find or modes to cycle through for the zoom function.









Reviews
There are no reviews yet.