I was in the insurance business for 25 years and retiring since 2018. I can tell you and everyone that listen, don’t file the insurance claim unless you have no others alternative. Once you claimed it, your premium will increased higher than you want to pay. If you want to switch to other insurance company, the new company might decline your application or you will have to pay high premium. EMP Shield could be the cheapest investment that everyone can have and affordable! Good luck everyone
Unfortunately my home was hit by lightning. I lost all my TVs that were only internet TVs using Wi-Fi not hooked to cable. My wife's computer that was on Wi-Fi, my computer and a bunch of other miscellaneous items in the home and I have been battling with EMP shield for over a year now for their lightning protection guarantee. I have a statement from the electrician that it was definitely lightning damage. I've sent pictures of the install and they still keep hemming and Hong and won't honor the lightning protection guarantee. My only hope is that it will actually work for an EMP cuz it failed on the lightning. I will say it was a direct hit. It even caused a fire blew up the power distribution center my camper as well so it was a massive lightning strike. But that's where the $25,000 protection is supposed to come in and they have yet to honor anything. I'm not happy
Me too. I bought several, but the one of my pool pump offgris solar got hit by lightening. They denied mine because it wasn't installed by an licensed electrician (even though my son installs solar professionallly);and they said I needed a different emp shield version in it) nowhere on their website did I find a requirement to have a licensed electrician install it and mine was offgrid. I wanted to hope it works, but I'm not sure anymore.... good thing my house didn't get struck by lightning....or an actual emp to find all this out.
they are scamming people in overselling the product it is nothing but a surge protector… so technically it only protects your electric circuit from going over a specific voltage it doesn’t protect the electronics from an strong electromagnetic field … (the source of damage in lighting and EMP) the only thing that does is a faraday cage the fact that the devices with wifi module got burned makes perfect sense … wifi is based on radio electromagnetic waves communication
I installed an EMP shield in my home 1 week before we had the biggest close lightning strike in 20 years of living here. All of our home wiring and electronics were perfectly protected. The only thing that needed replacing was the EMP shield device. I believe. Our emp shield company replaced the device free of charge. Then I bought an additional emp backup device.
I purchased 3 EMP Sheilds. I put an EMP Shield on my breaker box, one on my Generac Transfer Switch, and one directly on my Generac Generator ignition switch. The fourth EMP Shield will go on my vehicle.
@@TOOLMANTIMSWORKSHOP the reason the same type of EMP Shield can be used for auto and Generac ignition switch is for the same type of EMP. Not sure if it is a EMP 1, 2, or 3 that travels through the air. Where some EMP travels through the power lines.
The three phases of an EMP are: E1, which is the largest spike but also only lasts a nanosecond. The E2 lasts about a microsecond and the E3 is the one that lasts the longest and permeates in air and can last up to a few hours depending on the magnitude and amplified pulse. It would also be lengthened if you were in the epicenter of the impact.
I have a home and 2 cars EMP shielded. I also put items in faraday bags and cages. If the event does happen, the electrical surge will likely destroy household wiring. The EMP shield should protect that as well as all items plugged in within 250 feet of the device.
I would love to reverse engineer one of those things. I guess that little box holds within it some electronics and a condenser. I'll bet its parts only go for a few dollars.
Save your money, just buy a standard whole house surge protector, they are required on new homes anyway. You may be spending a hundred or two for a label that says emp and I am not sure the emp shield would meet the nec requirement, it may or may not.
@@kenpeters9807 Ken, I honestly cannot say one way or another but I am not sure you can either. How would you or I really know, I am not sure the company that sells them really knows. It may just be marketing hype and I happen to think it is, all I am certain of is they look exactly the same from an external point of view and they are designed to the same job. I do not trust anything that really cannot be tested, I am certainly not going to waste money on a maybe. I will take my chances on the standard version and spend the extra cash elsewhere. I already have in point of fact.
@@charlescoffey9523 charles. It’s not marketing hype. I know this for a fact. Very extensive testing (EMPs can be lab created). I held a TS and was in Defense industry. In 80s and 90s we were already doing extensive EM creation, experimentation and testing. EMP Shield has extensive military contracts meeting extreme testing and proof requirements. If youre interested I will try to find something that tells you about the speed of EMPs (long since gone from my archives. Believe me, there is a definitive difference!
@@charlescoffey9523 I agree! When you get a bunch of TH-camrs telling you to purchase something (cause they got it for free to hype it on their channel), it's time to run in the opposite direction!
I’m concerned about how a deliberate powerful EMP attack would affect the heart. Especially if a person is wearing a pacemaker.😳 EMP protection pouches can protect electrical devices zipped inside of them like a Faraday shield. Would wearing a vest made similarly act like a Faraday shield to protect the person’s heart and/or pacemaker?🤔💭
Hi! The audio in your video is only coming out of the left speaker, I tested other videos and my headphones prior to making this comment. Thanks for the informative video! Cheers!
You can make you own very easily. You will need 6 MOVs sized to dump a surge to the line of your choosing. You will need a hi potential common mode rated choke sized to take the current needed, you will need one gas tube sure arrestor, but 3 would be better, and finally a device called a bidirectional avalanche diode. Arrange so the power goes across the avalanche diodes and the gas tube arrestor. Then route power through the choke and protect the output with the MOVs. The grand total in parts to build this is less than 50 bucks. 😂
I'm a bit wary as far as protection against a military produced emp goes , but i could be interested in regard to a hobby of mine where a lightning strike is more than likely . My yacht has a 30 foot lighting conductor fitted , technically known as a mast . Actually it has two , but that's neither here nor there . A lightning strike which does happen from time to time so far to other people (touch wood i've managed to escape thus far) , can be particularly devastating to electrics and electronics . Mast head aerials would still suffer , but they are reasonably easy to replace , the expensive bits are below . There are other factors to take into consideration , but i could be persuaded on this one .
The product works, however….the most probable cause of an EMP is a nuclear attack or CME. The likelihood of your average homeowner surviving a nuclear attack are approximately nil. If you happened to survive a CME, your home will likely be overrun by the horde. Get one for your car, which will be your only means of escape.
This product is pretty much the same as many other surge clamping devices and I do not use it but instead use other devices.. What you are basically buying is a form of loss insurance policy since the company guarantees you with a financial loss contract that would cover losses from spike/surge/EMP beyond what your homeowners/renters/auto insurance policy does to a point.. I don't know of anyone describing the process they went through to claim and settle with this company so it is hard to say if this or is not a good deal..
Hahaha Tool man Tim All I can think is tv show Home improvement Tim “The Tool Man “ Tayler When stuff always go wrong Very very funny TV show I watch when on TV back 1991
By the time a fuse senses the over voltage , the damage is done and your electronics are fried. The EMP Shield senses and shunts in 500 trillionths of a second, which protects your devices. A standard surge protector and/or fast acting relay can not do that and therefore can’t handle a EMP. A EMP is 100x faster than a lightning strike. Let that sink in.
You do realize that an EMP will easily go through walls, right? A surge protector or fuse will probably keep the electricity from impacting your electronics in a normal situation. But your devices have already been directly hit, charged, and fried by the electromagnetic pulse itself. The only way to protect your whole house from an EMP is if you put a giant metal dome around it and coated the inner wall of the dome with rubber. (And if you were entirely self-sufficient when it came to power, and you kept it all within the dome and not touching the walls... Now, an EMP shield or fuse or surge protector, whatever, WILL likely protect against a coronal mass ejection, because CMEs have a much less broad electromagnetic frequency range than an EMP. A CME will fry your house's electrical system, but if you have a strong enough fuse, it will at least stop the electricity from getting into whatever is plugged into an outlet. Vehicles will be impacted, the entire power grid will be impacted, but if your phone or laptop isn't plugged into anything at that moment, it'll probably be just fine. You won't have electricity anymore though, and you probably shouldn't try to plug anything into any outlets anymore because you have no idea if a CME is still going or not. Btw it's not a good idea to try to use a generator either because it'll likely have a charge / be fried as well.
No offence seems like a scam. They will protect against CME yet a CME can’t damage a car unless it was plugged in and charging and u ignored the warnings that one was coming.
All electronics will not survive an EMP strike, even if they are not connected, or even turned on. This is a surge protector. A nukeular detonated missile will fry all ic chips in electronics, your tv, stove, microwave, fridge, furnace, cellphone, led house lights, cars, trucks, kiss em all goodbye. Your home won't stop the mass radiation wave flooding your home. Grounded metal storage devices, will help protect, most military equipment have special metal Harding of all electronics but it's not always perfect. why do preppers stock old filament light bulbs. Even some solar panels and charge controllers will die, only old acid batteries will last not lithium as they have ic chips in the battery. To protect against an emp pulse requires specialized stuff, and duplicates of items stored in special metal storage containers. Hmmm cargo containers now thats interesting when grounded and can store electronics on non conductive storage racks. The guy who stored his car in the cargo container may be very smart. But how would he get gasoline when every gas pump in the country is fried, ic chip electronics. Unless the pump is very old and purely mechanical.
I looked at the keystone testing report - here's my beef with the claim of protecting from EMP. The keystone tests don't pulse out a general 50,000 V/M, they inject surges into the power input, correct? So how does that protection protect the circuit board itself from the voltages in the atmosphere surrounding the entire circuit board? Those voltages are not necessarily coming into the power supply. Call me VERY skeptical, especially on the auto protection. They protect the input - what about the alternator surrounded by "EMP charged atmosphere"? How does the protection device on the car input protect the rectifier diodes on the alternator? Not the charges coming in on the battery, but the charges SURROUNDING the alternator itself? I have not seen an adequate test that covers this. I'm not making a statement of fact, I really want to learn and have this question answered becomes I'm VERY dubious of the device's use on EMP. PS I did note your comments on EMP is not guaranteed - nevertheless the products do at least imply EMP protection.
" So how does that protection protect the circuit board itself from the voltages in the atmosphere surrounding the entire circuit board?" what happens during an EMP is that conductors (ie wiring) collect the free electrons creating a voltage potential in the wiring. A surge suppress (EMP shield) acts like voltage clamp when the voltage excess a set voltage (Around 180V). Sort of like throwing a switch causing a short. The issue with whole house devices is that when EMP energy can be collected inside the household wiring & when the Surge suppressor clamps,creating a short, it basically doubles the voltage by creating a voltage loop between Hot and neutral. The only what any EMP\Surge protector can protect devices is if they they are installed a the point of load (ie at the outlet your device is plugged into. For an EMP to damage devices it needs to be connected to about 30 feet of wiring. Less than 30 feet there isn't enough energy to damage the device. When a point of load surge protector clamps there is only a few few of wiring ie the power cord. That said, it pointless to worry about protecting devices from an EMP because all of the nuclear power plants will meltdown & in a few weeks the spent fuel pools with catch fire as the pool water boils away and exposes the rods which catch fire when exposed to steam. All of North America will become un-inhabitable.
@@evecarrington562 Its got a three way set of MOVs. issue is that there are limits & cannot address issues with household wiring (incorrect wiring). Realistically the only way to protect a device is at the point of load: attached on the outlet the device is plugged into.
I purchased an EMP Shield for my solar controller. It totally discharged my batteries and damaged the controller forcing me to buy another. I'd NEVER advise someone to buy this thing as they do NOT stand behind their warranty. Incidentally, they have NOT adequately tested this thing so there's no proof that it will actually work.
That stinks. I actually was considering one for solar as I already have the Siemens for my whole house. So I'm assuming the company did not assist you regarding their warranty? What was their response?
@@stmcgarret They basically just ignored my complaint and called me concerning the negative comments that I was posting everywhere. They finally did give me a refund but deducted 20% and treated it like a restocking fee. I'd NEVER recommend this company to anyone. I bought a surge suppressor from the Midnite Solar people and put it on my controller which is also a Midnite controller. I've never had a problem since.
@@tekki2060 Thanks for your reply. That is terrible. I've looked into Midnight Solar but now am convinced they are the better company to go with. Best to you.
@@SimpleLivingForever I have a Midnite Classic 150 controller and SimpliPHI batteries. Everything is wired to a combiner box. I've got 2.4 kilowatts of solar panels and I'm going to put up my wind turbine this summer. So far everything has been working real well. Other than the EMP Shield issue I've had absolutely no problems and would recommend these products to anyone.
As a money guy I really appreciated you bringing up the importance of having your money in order and a rainy day fund before buying something like this.
As a money guy, I appreciated you bringing up the importance of having your money in order, that's why I purchased an EMP Shield because I lost over $4,000 in electronics due to a power surge. Glad my money is protected now.
Dude, when you responded to the question what good does a “guarantee ” do if the economy collapses, then mention the $25 warranty, I laughed. Seriously, you dodged the question, then promoted a worthless guarantee if the economy collapsed. 😂
EMP Shields also protect against a 1. power surge and a 2. lightening strike. I had a power surge and it destroyed almost $4,000 in electronics. You are missing the point. Don't do anything for protection if it makes you feel better.
@@SilvexPhoto Long story short: A Faraday cage's first line of defense is redirecting the electricity, its second line of defense is making sure no electricity enters the container. Because no electricity is able to enter the container, any electronic device inside is safe. (As long as the container is closed) Now what is an "EMP Shield"? Well, it's a tiny metal box with a bunch of electronics directly inside of it, with wires coming out of it (at least as far as I can see). Not only will this do absolutely nothing to protect anything, it won't even be able to protect itself, it will simply break. 1. It isn't containing anything, nor is it physically covering anything up. Unless you had a giant metal dome around your house, or your walls were solid metal with wallpaper made of rubber, and no wiring actually inside the walls, well you're not protected against an EMP at all. 2. If it were somehow generating some kind of electrical frequency that could stabilize or nullify the (very wide range of) electromagnetic frequencies generated from an EMP, then the device itself would obviously require electricity. And given that it will likely need to be wired up to an outlet, and because EMPs obviously affect the power grid, it'll get wrecked before it can even do anything; and that's assuming it even can do anything. Not to mention, I can't think of a single frequency or force of nature that isn't physical that can stop such a wide range of electromagnetic frequencies, if it can somehow do this, good for it. But that would likely require some kind of extremely sophisticated system, and guzzle electricity like nobody's business, and that's only scratching the surface. For it to somehow be generating all these different electromagnetic frequencies that can supposedly stop the ones from an EMP, it would likely be generating the same ones from an EMP itself, making *IT* the threat. Not to mention, such a wide range of electrical frequencies being blasted into the air all the time. Even if these somehow weren't immediately harmful, they would more than likely be slowly breaking down everything electric around them, especially the device itself. It would also probably give people migraines, or it could *ATTRACT* lightning strikes given that it's constantly creating a charge in a bunch of different objects and surfaces. So I personally don't see any realistic way for such a device, like presented, to ever work as implied. Something like the device presented, but it actually works completely as intended? That would practically be magic, no way would it be publicly available, especially not for $300. I mean, what DOESN'T sound magical about a little box you plug into your wall and it blocks a WMD?
Use this coupon code to save $50 on your purchase of an EMP Shield www.empshield.com?coupon=toolmantim/
If there's an EMP...there ain't gonna be no insurance claims being filed.
Kind of.a clickbait teaser line but at least I didn't watch the whole thing.
I was in the insurance business for 25 years and retiring since 2018. I can tell you and everyone that listen, don’t file the insurance claim unless you have no others alternative. Once you claimed it, your premium will increased higher than you want to pay. If you want to switch to other insurance company, the new company might decline your application or you will have to pay high premium. EMP Shield could be the cheapest investment that everyone can have and affordable! Good luck everyone
Unfortunately my home was hit by lightning. I lost all my TVs that were only internet TVs using Wi-Fi not hooked to cable. My wife's computer that was on Wi-Fi, my computer and a bunch of other miscellaneous items in the home and I have been battling with EMP shield for over a year now for their lightning protection guarantee. I have a statement from the electrician that it was definitely lightning damage. I've sent pictures of the install and they still keep hemming and Hong and won't honor the lightning protection guarantee. My only hope is that it will actually work for an EMP cuz it failed on the lightning. I will say it was a direct hit. It even caused a fire blew up the power distribution center my camper as well so it was a massive lightning strike. But that's where the $25,000 protection is supposed to come in and they have yet to honor anything. I'm not happy
Hint: It won't do shit for an actual EMP. Its literally a scam. As you've seen by them being a scammy company to you arelady.
Me too. I bought several, but the one of my pool pump offgris solar got hit by lightening. They denied mine because it wasn't installed by an licensed electrician (even though my son installs solar professionallly);and they said I needed a different emp shield version in it) nowhere on their website did I find a requirement to have a licensed electrician install it and mine was offgrid. I wanted to hope it works, but I'm not sure anymore.... good thing my house didn't get struck by lightning....or an actual emp to find all this out.
@@Djachq lol. its a scam either way
they are scamming people in overselling the product
it is nothing but a surge protector… so technically it only protects your electric circuit from going over a specific voltage
it doesn’t protect the electronics from an strong electromagnetic field … (the source of damage in lighting and EMP) the only thing
that does is a faraday cage
the fact that the devices with wifi module got burned makes perfect sense … wifi is based on radio electromagnetic waves communication
@@Stealth55555 EMP Shield Has Surpassed Military EMP Protection Testing Standards.
You can buy a surge breaker to put in your breaker panel for far less.
I installed an EMP shield in my home 1 week before we had the biggest close lightning strike in 20 years of living here. All of our home wiring and electronics were perfectly protected. The only thing that needed replacing was the EMP shield device. I believe. Our emp shield company replaced the device free of charge. Then I bought an additional emp backup device.
A 'close' lightning strike? Well gee willickers mister you sold me on it!!!😂😂😂
I purchased 3 EMP Sheilds. I put an EMP Shield on my breaker box, one on my Generac Transfer Switch, and one directly on my Generac Generator ignition switch. The fourth EMP Shield will go on my vehicle.
the first they sent me went on my house, and the next two I just bought will be going on our trucks, thanks for takign the time to comment
@@TOOLMANTIMSWORKSHOP the same type of EMP Shield that went on my Generac Generator ignition switch is also used for autos.
@@TOOLMANTIMSWORKSHOP the reason the same type of EMP Shield can be used for auto and Generac ignition switch is for the same type of EMP. Not sure if it is a EMP 1, 2, or 3 that travels through the air. Where some EMP travels through the power lines.
That makes sense thanks for sharing that
The three phases of an EMP are: E1, which is the largest spike but also only lasts a nanosecond. The E2 lasts about a microsecond and the E3 is the one that lasts the longest and permeates in air and can last up to a few hours depending on the magnitude and amplified pulse. It would also be lengthened if you were in the epicenter of the impact.
I have a home and 2 cars EMP shielded. I also put items in faraday bags and cages. If the event does happen, the electrical surge will likely destroy household wiring. The EMP shield should protect that as well as all items plugged in within 250 feet of the device.
No, it won't lol
I would love to reverse engineer one of those things. I guess that little box holds within it some electronics and a condenser. I'll bet its parts only go for a few dollars.
It's a scam. Plain and simple.
Save your money, just buy a standard whole house surge protector, they are required on new homes anyway. You may be spending a hundred or two for a label that says emp and I am not sure the emp shield would meet the nec requirement, it may or may not.
Finally found a Siemens FS140 for $139, those Aholes on those prep-per sites were wanting $300 for them!🤬🤬
A surge pt]rotector is not fast enough. Better do your homework. The emp shield will act as a surge protector
@@kenpeters9807 Ken, I honestly cannot say one way or another but I am not sure you can either. How would you or I really know, I am not sure the company that sells them really knows. It may just be marketing hype and I happen to think it is, all I am certain of is they look exactly the same from an external point of view and they are designed to the same job. I do not trust anything that really cannot be tested, I am certainly not going to waste money on a maybe. I will take my chances on the standard version and spend the extra cash elsewhere. I already have in point of fact.
@@charlescoffey9523 charles. It’s not marketing hype. I know this for a fact. Very extensive testing (EMPs can be lab created). I held a TS and was in Defense industry. In 80s and 90s we were already doing extensive EM creation, experimentation and testing. EMP Shield has extensive military contracts meeting extreme testing and proof requirements. If youre interested I will try to find something that tells you about the speed of EMPs (long since gone from my archives. Believe me, there is a definitive difference!
@@charlescoffey9523 I agree! When you get a bunch of TH-camrs telling you to purchase something (cause they got it for free to hype it on their channel), it's time to run in the opposite direction!
I’m concerned about how a deliberate powerful EMP attack would affect the heart. Especially if a person is wearing a pacemaker.😳
EMP protection pouches can protect electrical devices zipped inside of them like a Faraday shield. Would wearing a vest made similarly act like a Faraday shield to protect the person’s heart and/or pacemaker?🤔💭
Don't forget to get in shape, plenty of ammo and gun cleaners.
Lots of good info here, thank you for making this video!
New (other) CA electrical code requires surge protection at panel, not to that level though.
I'm still undecided emp shield or Siemens model.
Very good video!I have allready bought 3 of them..house,shop.truck...
Glad to see someone thinks like we do. We have the whole house, solar and vehicle EMP Shields. Better safe than sorry.
Hi! The audio in your video is only coming out of the left speaker, I tested other videos and my headphones prior to making this comment. Thanks for the informative video! Cheers!
You can make you own very easily. You will need 6 MOVs sized to dump a surge to the line of your choosing. You will need a hi potential common mode rated choke sized to take the current needed, you will need one gas tube sure arrestor, but 3 would be better, and finally a device called a bidirectional avalanche diode. Arrange so the power goes across the avalanche diodes and the gas tube arrestor. Then route power through the choke and protect the output with the MOVs. The grand total in parts to build this is less than 50 bucks. 😂
Perfectly said. Hats off sir. The most common sense conversations on the Internet to date.
I'm a bit wary as far as protection against a military produced emp goes , but i could be interested in regard to a hobby of mine where a lightning strike is more than likely . My yacht has a 30 foot lighting conductor fitted , technically known as a mast . Actually it has two , but that's neither here nor there . A lightning strike which does happen from time to time so far to other people (touch wood i've managed to escape thus far) , can be particularly devastating to electrics and electronics . Mast head aerials would still suffer , but they are reasonably easy to replace , the expensive bits are below . There are other factors to take into consideration , but i could be persuaded on this one .
Nicely crafted sales pitch
I have one vehicle that has the + and - wire disconnecte3d and jumped together and the the vehicle's chassis is hooked to an 8 ft ground rod.
The product works, however….the most probable cause of an EMP is a nuclear attack or CME. The likelihood of your average homeowner surviving a nuclear attack are approximately nil. If you happened to survive a CME, your home will likely be overrun by the horde. Get one for your car, which will be your only means of escape.
excellent video , thank you
This product is pretty much the same as many other surge clamping devices and I do not use it but instead use other devices.. What you are basically buying is a form of loss insurance policy since the company guarantees you with a financial loss contract that would cover losses from spike/surge/EMP beyond what your homeowners/renters/auto insurance policy does to a point.. I don't know of anyone describing the process they went through to claim and settle with this company so it is hard to say if this or is not a good deal..
If they have a $50 replacement guarantee, thats probably what it cost to make them.
What abit shielding from Direct Energy Weapons.. Affordable shielding for my car and btrailer.
Hahaha
Tool man Tim
All I can think is tv show
Home improvement
Tim “The Tool Man “ Tayler
When stuff always go wrong
Very very funny TV show I watch when on TV back 1991
What is recommended?
Can you do a comparison of emp shield vs defcon?? For cars.
How is it different from a fuse, if the powers to much fuse burns out and saves your stuff that's what fuses are for.
By the time a fuse senses the over voltage , the damage is done and your electronics are fried. The EMP Shield senses and shunts in 500 trillionths of a second, which protects your devices. A standard surge protector and/or fast acting relay can not do that and therefore can’t handle a EMP. A EMP is 100x faster than a lightning strike. Let that sink in.
You do realize that an EMP will easily go through walls, right? A surge protector or fuse will probably keep the electricity from impacting your electronics in a normal situation. But your devices have already been directly hit, charged, and fried by the electromagnetic pulse itself. The only way to protect your whole house from an EMP is if you put a giant metal dome around it and coated the inner wall of the dome with rubber. (And if you were entirely self-sufficient when it came to power, and you kept it all within the dome and not touching the walls...
Now, an EMP shield or fuse or surge protector, whatever, WILL likely protect against a coronal mass ejection, because CMEs have a much less broad electromagnetic frequency range than an EMP.
A CME will fry your house's electrical system, but if you have a strong enough fuse, it will at least stop the electricity from getting into whatever is plugged into an outlet. Vehicles will be impacted, the entire power grid will be impacted, but if your phone or laptop isn't plugged into anything at that moment, it'll probably be just fine. You won't have electricity anymore though, and you probably shouldn't try to plug anything into any outlets anymore because you have no idea if a CME is still going or not. Btw it's not a good idea to try to use a generator either because it'll likely have a charge / be fried as well.
I want on both of my vehicles one of my semi one in my home I can always get home
Good video!
Thanks man I appreciate it
Is the power company protected from EMP?
Can I use an EMP Shield with a townhouse?
No offence seems like a scam. They will protect against CME yet a CME can’t damage a car unless it was plugged in and charging and u ignored the warnings that one was coming.
It IS a scam!
All electronics will not survive an EMP strike, even if they are not connected, or even turned on. This is a surge protector. A nukeular detonated missile will fry all ic chips in electronics, your tv, stove, microwave, fridge, furnace, cellphone, led house lights, cars, trucks, kiss em all goodbye. Your home won't stop the mass radiation wave flooding your home. Grounded metal storage devices, will help protect, most military equipment have special metal Harding of all electronics but it's not always perfect. why do preppers stock old filament light bulbs. Even some solar panels and charge controllers will die, only old acid batteries will last not lithium as they have ic chips in the battery. To protect against an emp pulse requires specialized stuff, and duplicates of items stored in special metal storage containers. Hmmm cargo containers now thats interesting when grounded and can store electronics on non conductive storage racks. The guy who stored his car in the cargo container may be very smart. But how would he get gasoline when every gas pump in the country is fried, ic chip electronics. Unless the pump is very old and purely mechanical.
I bought one for my vehicle.
You are not going to survive an EMP attack. Make sure you can survive off grid with non electric tools
I looked at the keystone testing report - here's my beef with the claim of protecting from EMP. The keystone tests don't pulse out a general 50,000 V/M, they inject surges into the power input, correct? So how does that protection protect the circuit board itself from the voltages in the atmosphere surrounding the entire circuit board? Those voltages are not necessarily coming into the power supply. Call me VERY skeptical, especially on the auto protection. They protect the input - what about the alternator surrounded by "EMP charged atmosphere"? How does the protection device on the car input protect the rectifier diodes on the alternator? Not the charges coming in on the battery, but the charges SURROUNDING the alternator itself? I have not seen an adequate test that covers this. I'm not making a statement of fact, I really want to learn and have this question answered becomes I'm VERY dubious of the device's use on EMP. PS I did note your comments on EMP is not guaranteed - nevertheless the products do at least imply EMP protection.
" So how does that protection protect the circuit board itself from the voltages in the atmosphere surrounding the entire circuit board?"
what happens during an EMP is that conductors (ie wiring) collect the free electrons creating a voltage potential in the wiring. A surge suppress (EMP shield) acts like voltage clamp when the voltage excess a set voltage (Around 180V). Sort of like throwing a switch causing a short. The issue with whole house devices is that when EMP energy can be collected inside the household wiring & when the Surge suppressor clamps,creating a short, it basically doubles the voltage by creating a voltage loop between Hot and neutral. The only what any EMP\Surge protector can protect devices is if they they are installed a the point of load (ie at the outlet your device is plugged into. For an EMP to damage devices it needs to be connected to about 30 feet of wiring. Less than 30 feet there isn't enough energy to damage the device. When a point of load surge protector clamps there is only a few few of wiring ie the power cord.
That said, it pointless to worry about protecting devices from an EMP because all of the nuclear power plants will meltdown & in a few weeks the spent fuel pools with catch fire as the pool water boils away and exposes the rods which catch fire when exposed to steam. All of North America will become un-inhabitable.
Everything I've read about it is that it's a scam. It's just a tiny box with lights.
@@evecarrington562 Its got a three way set of MOVs. issue is that there are limits & cannot address issues with household wiring (incorrect wiring). Realistically the only way to protect a device is at the point of load: attached on the outlet the device is plugged into.
Anybody ever try a diy emp on this Made up of a taser parts 50kv capacitor and coil of Enamel coded wire?
Thank you
Emp yup I actually had my own I remember
I paid for mine before I decided to sell them
I purchased an EMP Shield for my solar controller. It totally discharged my batteries and damaged the controller forcing me to buy another. I'd NEVER advise someone to buy this thing as they do NOT stand behind their warranty. Incidentally, they have NOT adequately tested this thing so there's no proof that it will actually work.
That stinks. I actually was considering one for solar as I already have the Siemens for my whole house. So I'm assuming the company did not assist you regarding their warranty? What was their response?
@@stmcgarret They basically just ignored my complaint and called me concerning the negative comments that I was posting everywhere. They finally did give me a refund but deducted 20% and treated it like a restocking fee. I'd NEVER recommend this company to anyone. I bought a surge suppressor from the Midnite Solar people and put it on my controller which is also a Midnite controller. I've never had a problem since.
@@tekki2060 Thanks for your reply. That is terrible. I've looked into Midnight Solar but now am convinced they are the better company to go with. Best to you.
Sorry for the damaged of your system. I was wondering how did you wire your system and what kind of solar power system do you have?
@@SimpleLivingForever I have a Midnite Classic 150 controller and SimpliPHI batteries. Everything is wired to a combiner box. I've got 2.4 kilowatts of solar panels and I'm going to put up my wind turbine this summer. So far everything has been working real well. Other than the EMP Shield issue I've had absolutely no problems and would recommend these products to anyone.
Love my EMP shield
have EMP on my RV and solar
I purchased three units.
I’m afraid of being broke. That’s why I work.
Well it's like this brother. When u have a deep freeze full of meat I'm going to purchase one even if toilet paper waits as God has leaves lol
Thanks!
As a money guy I really appreciated you bringing up the importance of having your money in order and a rainy day fund before buying something like this.
As a money guy, I appreciated you bringing up the importance of having your money in order, that's why I purchased an EMP Shield because I lost over $4,000 in electronics due to a power surge. Glad my money is protected now.
the mono sound is killing me xd
ALERT!!! NATURAL ELECTRICITY ⚡ FROM MAPLE AND EVERGREEN TREES! - AI
Really skeptical...save your money
Trust the guy who is giving you a coupon for $50 to buy one, lol.
I WILL FEAR NO BEER.
Dude, when you responded to the question what good does a “guarantee ” do if the economy collapses, then mention the $25 warranty, I laughed. Seriously, you dodged the question, then promoted a worthless guarantee if the economy collapsed. 😂
EMP Shields also protect against a 1. power surge and a 2. lightening strike. I had a power surge and it destroyed almost $4,000 in electronics. You are missing the point. Don't do anything for protection if it makes you feel better.
Nice Clickbait title. I won't be back.
Toilet paper?! Buy a bidet hose. Buy Crossword puzzle books
Algo comment
No sound, just video.
🤣🤣🤣, Another EMP Shield BS Shill getting kickbacks!😱😱😱
Plus EMP shield won't work. Scam
How do you know?
@@SilvexPhoto Long story short: A Faraday cage's first line of defense is redirecting the electricity, its second line of defense is making sure no electricity enters the container. Because no electricity is able to enter the container, any electronic device inside is safe. (As long as the container is closed)
Now what is an "EMP Shield"? Well, it's a tiny metal box with a bunch of electronics directly inside of it, with wires coming out of it (at least as far as I can see). Not only will this do absolutely nothing to protect anything, it won't even be able to protect itself, it will simply break.
1. It isn't containing anything, nor is it physically covering anything up. Unless you had a giant metal dome around your house, or your walls were solid metal with wallpaper made of rubber, and no wiring actually inside the walls, well you're not protected against an EMP at all.
2. If it were somehow generating some kind of electrical frequency that could stabilize or nullify the (very wide range of) electromagnetic frequencies generated from an EMP, then the device itself would obviously require electricity. And given that it will likely need to be wired up to an outlet, and because EMPs obviously affect the power grid, it'll get wrecked before it can even do anything; and that's assuming it even can do anything.
Not to mention, I can't think of a single frequency or force of nature that isn't physical that can stop such a wide range of electromagnetic frequencies, if it can somehow do this, good for it. But that would likely require some kind of extremely sophisticated system, and guzzle electricity like nobody's business, and that's only scratching the surface. For it to somehow be generating all these different electromagnetic frequencies that can supposedly stop the ones from an EMP, it would likely be generating the same ones from an EMP itself, making *IT* the threat.
Not to mention, such a wide range of electrical frequencies being blasted into the air all the time. Even if these somehow weren't immediately harmful, they would more than likely be slowly breaking down everything electric around them, especially the device itself. It would also probably give people migraines, or it could *ATTRACT* lightning strikes given that it's constantly creating a charge in a bunch of different objects and surfaces.
So I personally don't see any realistic way for such a device, like presented, to ever work as implied. Something like the device presented, but it actually works completely as intended? That would practically be magic, no way would it be publicly available, especially not for $300. I mean, what DOESN'T sound magical about a little box you plug into your wall and it blocks a WMD?
ALL MY GUNS ARE GROUNDED.
100% disagree...full of BS
I agree! This guy is probably getting paid to hawk this product!