If the Grid Goes Down Tonight, How Does Your Family Know What to Do?

Your phone dies in hours. Cell towers go down in minutes. One system stays on no matter what and almost nobody has a device that receives it.

You've been watching the news. You know what's happening.

 

Strikes in the Middle East. Oil infrastructure hit. Cyberattacks on allied nations. And every expert saying the same thing: the US power grid is a target and it isn't ready.

 

If you're here, you've probably already started preparing. Water. Food. Flashlights. Good.

But there's a gap in almost every plan that turns a bad situation into blind panic. It's not supplies. It's 

 

INFORMATION
 

When the grid goes down, how do you know whether to shelter or evacuate? Which roads are open? Whether help is coming?

Your phone can't answer that when the towers are down and the battery's dead.

 

———

Last April, Rachel M. in Spokane woke up at 3am to a scream from the emergency radio on her nightstand. Tornado warning. Her county. Right now!

 

She grabbed her kids, got to the basement, called her parents. Four minutes.

Her phone never alerted her. The sirens hadn't gone off yet. The only device that caught the warning was a radio she'd almost forgotten about.

Without it? She wakes up to glass breaking. No information. No signal. Two kids asking questions she can't answer.

 

Now imagine that's not a tornado. It's a cyberattack that takes down the grid across multiple states. No timeline. No cell towers. No internet.

 

Here's the problem: your phone is the first thing that dies.

Every system it depends on towers, internet, electricity runs on the same grid. 

 

One failure takes everything with it.

 

With what's happening in the world right now, that's not theoretical.

 

———

There's a system that doesn't need towers, internet, or the grid. It's been running since 1966, broadcasting 24/7 across every county in the US.

NOAA Weather Radio. Seven dedicated channels transmitting tornado warnings, flood alerts, wildfire evacuations, civil emergencies, and FEMA directives.

 

Radio waves travel through the air. No carrier. No tower. When every digital system goes down, broadcast radio is the last line standing.

The problem? Almost nobody has a device that receives it.

Most emergency radios are camping gadgets. One or two bands. Dead in a drawer within a year. Not built for what's on the table right now.

The PureFlow Emergency Radio receives every government emergency band — NOAA, AM, FM. The All-Hazards auto-alert monitors 24/7 and wakes itself up the moment a warning hits.

Four Independent Power Sources

Hand crank, solar panel, USB charging, AAA batteries. Four separate systems. The crank is purely mechanical — no sun, no grid, you turn it and it works.

📱

Charges Your Phone

7,400mWh power bank via USB. Gets a dead phone to 40–60% — enough to make calls, check maps, and navigate to safety.

🔦

SOS Alarm + Dual LED Lights

Zoomable flashlight, reading lamp, and a loud siren with flashing beacon so rescuers find you without you burning your voice.

💧

Built to Survive

IPX3 water resistant. 10.9oz. Every unit individually inspected before it ships. FCC certified. Limited Lifetime Warranty.

Most people don’t realize how dependent they are on systems that can fail in seconds.


A simple, self-powered emergency radio might not sound like much — until it’s the only thing still working.

 

Preparedness isn’t about fear. It’s about foresight.


Because when the grid goes down, the only people who stay informed… are the ones who planned ahead.

get yours before they're gone!

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when the grid goes down, information is survival.
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Title

They're Targeting Infrastructure. Your Phone Runs on Infrastructure. This Doesn't.

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