How do Stun Guns work?
A stun
gun is an electrical self-defense device that uses high voltage
to stop an attacker. Touching a person with the prongs on the stun
gun quickly immobilizes the attacker. However, because the amperage
is very low, no serious or permanent injury is inflicted.
The stun gun is designed to key into
the nervous system. It dumps its energy into the muscles at a high
pulse frequency that makes the muscles work very rapidly, but not
efficiently. This rapid work cycle depletes blood sugar by converting
it to lactic acid all in just seconds. The resulting energy loss
makes it difficult to move and function. At the same time, the tiny
neurological impulses that travel throughout the body to direct
muscle movement are interrupted. This causes disorientation and
loss of balance and leaves the attacker in a passive and confused
condition for several minutes. Still, there is no significant effect
on the heart and other organs.
As a general rule, a one-half second contact can repel and startle
the attacker, giving some pain and muscle contraction. One to two
seconds can cause muscle spasms and a dazed mental state. Over three
seconds can cause loss of balance and muscle control, mental confusion
and disorientation. Realize that 3 seconds is quite a long time
when in a physical struggle. Every person is different and will
react differently to the effects of a stun gun. What may put one
person down in 3 seconds could take 5 seconds on another person.
The electrical
shock that emits from the unit will not pass from the person being
stunned to the person doing the stunning. The effect is localized
only in the affected area and does not pass through the body. Even
if you or the attacker are wet or standing in water, you will not
get shocked.
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