A Stun Baton Designed for What Could Actually Go Wrong
Most stun devices are designed around one scenario: you activate it, it works. The Repeller is designed for a second scenario: what if the person you’re trying to stop tries to grab the baton. The shock strips along the barrel address that directly. Anyone gripping the barrel during a struggle gets a shock — not just the tip. That’s a meaningful design difference from a standard stun gun.
The disable pin adds another layer. It’s the same concept used on some pepper sprays — the wrist strap has a pin that connects to the device. If the baton is pulled away from you, the pin separates and the device stops working. That means it can’t be turned against you if it’s taken.
Who This Stun Baton Is For
The 12-inch length makes the Repeller a better fit for home use, nighttime walks, or anyone who wants more working reach than a palm-size stun gun provides. It’s not a pocket carry option — it’s holster or bag carry, and it works well as a bedside tool or kept in a bag for someone who walks or parks in areas that feel less secure at night.
It’s also a practical choice for people who’ve thought through the scenario of a stun gun being taken. If that’s a scenario you’ve considered, the barrel shock strips and disable pin address it in a way that standard compact stun guns don’t.
Is This the Right Choice for You?
Choose the Repeller if you want:
- More reach than a compact stun gun, with shock strips along the full barrel
- A disable pin that prevents the device from being used against you if taken
- A 3-mode flashlight with strobe capability in a durable, grippable housing
Consider something else if you need:
- Discreet or pocket carry — at 12 inches, this is a bag or holster tool
- Standoff distance — like pepper spray or a TASER, this is contact-range only
What the Features Actually Do
The rubberized coating does two things: it gives you a firm grip in wet conditions or under stress, and it provides the surface through which the barrel shock strips operate. Those strips run along the sides of the baton and are live when the device is activated — so a grip on any part of the barrel, not just the tip, completes a circuit.
The 120-lumen flashlight has three modes: high beam for illumination, low beam for extended battery life, and strobe for disorientation or signaling. Strobe is genuinely disorienting at close range and can be used as a first-response tool before activating the stun function.
Rechargeable Ni-CD battery means no replacing disposable cells — plug in the included charger and it’s ready. The nylon holster keeps it accessible on a belt or bag. Wrist strap is included and designed to work with the disable pin function, so wear it as intended for that safety feature to function.
Quick Comparison: How Does the Repeller Stack Up?
| Feature | Repeller Stun Baton | Compact Stun Gun | Expandable Baton | Pepper Spray |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Milliamp output | 4.6 mA ✓ | Varies | N/A | N/A |
| Barrel shock strips | Yes ✓ | No | No | No |
| Disable pin safety | Yes ✓ | Sometimes | No | No |
| Working reach | 12 inches ✓ | Contact (palm) | 16–21 inches ✓ | 6–15 feet ✓ |
| Multi-mode flashlight | 3 modes ✓ | Sometimes 1 mode | No | No |
| Best For | Extended reach with anti-grab and disable features | Discreet daily carry | Maximum reach, impact tool | Distance, no contact required |
Practical Details
Dimensions: 12″ x 1½”. Weight: 1.3 lbs. Rechargeable Ni-CD battery. 120-lumen LED flashlight with high, low, and strobe modes. ABS plastic housing with rubberized coating. Barrel shock strips active when device is on. Disable pin wrist strap included. Nylon holster included. 4.6 milliamps. 40,000,000 volts. Lifetime warranty from Safety Technology. Verify stun device laws in your state before purchase.
The Repeller is for someone who’s thought beyond just “will it work” and also considered “what if it gets taken” — the barrel strips and disable pin answer both questions.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do the barrel shock strips work?
The shock strips are conductive elements embedded in the rubberized coating along the sides of the baton. When the device is activated, those strips are live — meaning anyone grabbing or holding the barrel at any point (not just the tip) will receive a shock. This is specifically designed for struggle scenarios where someone attempts to wrestle the baton away. The strips don’t activate passively — the device has to be switched on first.
What happens if the disable pin comes out accidentally?
When the disable pin separates from the wrist strap, both the stun function and the flashlight stop working. The pin reinserts easily — just push it back into the port on the device. If you’re using the flashlight in a normal situation and the pin works loose, you’d lose the light until you reseat it. It’s worth checking that the pin is properly seated before you rely on the flashlight for anything important.
Is the Ni-CD battery harder to maintain than lithium?
Ni-CD batteries perform well in devices that get used and recharged regularly. They do better with a full discharge before recharging — ideally running the device down before plugging in — rather than partial top-offs. If you just leave it fully charged for months without use, the battery can develop reduced capacity over time. Setting a monthly reminder to test and recharge keeps it in good shape.
Is a 12-inch baton legal to carry in public?
Laws on stun batons vary by state and local jurisdiction. Some states that permit compact stun guns have separate or stricter rules for batons. A few states prohibit all stun devices. Even where legal, there may be restrictions on carrying in specific locations. Check your state statutes and local ordinances before carrying this in public — what’s legal at home may not be legal on your hip at a shopping center.









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