Product details
Xiangbin car safety hammer — 2-in-1 seat belt cutter & glass breaker (red)
This neat little 2-in-1 emergency tool is the sort of thing you tuck in the glovebox and hardly think about… until you really need it. It pairs a tungsten-steel impact head with a hidden cutting blade so getting out of a car after an accident is quicker and far less fiddly.
Built for emergency use
The hardened tungsten-steel head delivers a solid, high-impact strike that will shatter tempered car windows in seconds — the manufacturer quotes roughly 20kg instantaneous impact. It’s designed to work even if the vehicle is partially submerged. There’s even a small glass sample included so you can try it at home if you fancy a test. That kind of reassurance matters if you ever find yourself escaping from water or after a rollover.
Safe seat belt cutting
The cutter blade sits behind a guarded slot so fingers can’t wander in. It slices through jammed belts cleanly and quickly, which makes all the difference if the buckle won’t release after a collision. No mucking about with improvised tools — you can get straight to freeing yourself or a passenger.
Practical, no-nonsense design
- Compact and lightweight — slips into the glovebox, centre console or door pocket without taking up space.
- Self-adhesive mounting base — sticks neatly to the centre console for instant access and keeps things tidy.
- High-visibility red — easy to spot when you’re in a hurry.
- Simple to use — point, strike, cut. No special training required.
It’s straightforward kit rather than fancy tech, and that’s the point. Typical situations where it helps: a crash that jams a door, a rollover, sudden flooding where you need to break a window, or any incident where a seat belt won’t release. Having a tool like this within reach gives immediate peace of mind on long runs or around town.
A couple of useful notes: this is a manual impact tool, not spring‑loaded, so it relies on a firm strike to break glass — have a safe practice if you’re curious. Check the adhesive base now and then to make sure the tool stays put and within reach. It’s a small outlay that could make a world of difference when it matters most.








