Price: $339.00
(as of Feb 16, 2025 16:56:11 UTC – Details)
The EMP Shield portable provides EMP and lightning protection for your RV, camper, trailer and any electronics connected to it. This lightweight and portable EMP Shield is ideal for those who frequently travel and need protection from electromagnetic surges and lightning. It is also great for RV’s, portable generators, and any electrical equipment you want to protect that is connect to our device. The shield is backed by a 10 year warranty and is 100% made in the United States by a veteran owned company.
Listed by the Department of Homeland Security in their 2019 EMP Resillience Report.
100% American Made by a Veteran Owned Company.
Provides protection against EMP (E1, E2, E3), Lightning and Coronal Mass Ejections.
Surpasses all Military EMP Defense Testing Standards: MIL-STD-188-125-1, 461-G, 64-C, RS-105.
Industry Leading 10 Year Warranty with a $25,000 Insurance Policy.
Description
Reviews (7)
7 reviews for EMP Shield Portable for RV’s, Renters, Travel Campers, and Camping
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Amazon Customer –
Peace of mind
Happened to see this and thought it was a great idea, and still do, glad I purchased, having peace of mind is everything 🙌
Chris Hales –
It’s solidly built while allowing the electricity to flow and will hopefully do its job, when needed
The Portable EMP protection from EMP Shield, appears to be a well-made and highly useful device if or when we ever experience an EMP, Lightning or Coronal Mass Ejections. The quality feels nice and like it might be up to the task, but fortunately, I haven’t experienced any of the above to actually test it. In the meantime, it allows the electricity to flow through it effortlessly and provides me peace of mind, that my devices might stand a chance, if I ever have to experience one of those events.
Daniel J. Zieler –
One Time Price Insurance Policy Against Your Electronics Investment
Ok, let’s look at the big elephant in the room which is the price tag. But which price tag? The price of the product, or the price of your investment this is meant to protect? That has always been your first question to ask, be it the cost of your auto, or home insurance compared to what you have invested, or simple things like optional warranty service protection plans costs you can buy for many things you own and invested in. So, this is not that much different other than it is a onetime purchase to cover the lifetime of what you are protecting. While others are reviewing the actual product which would be redundant in my opinion for me to do also, I wanted to take a different viewpoint in my review which is cost vs benefit. So it now becomes a very subjective review based on your own situation against what you will be using this product for to protect. Given that the claims of the product are accurate, then this will offer you a lot of Special Surge Protection which you should have anyway for most all your electronic devices to varying degrees. So at this said level of protection, if you have things of much greater value than the cost of the product that this will protect, then yes, this is absolutely worth getting. But this to protect your $250 TV, no. You be the judge. But to me, this against several thousands of dollars or more in equipment and maybe data too, heck yes, worth it.
Schwartz –
Just like Dad used to make…
This thing appears to be put together from off-the-shelf parts. The boxes, plugs, and outlets all look like they came straight from Home Depot. The 6-outlet adapter is a GE-made one plugged into a standard outlet. I can’t tell you what is inside the main box but it sure seems expensive for what it is. I am guessing it is standard off-the-shelf parts too. I’m not saying this is garbage, the parts seem to be of good quality. I just think you’d be better off getting a standard high-quality surge-suppressing power strip for a lot less.
Jon T. –
Peace of Mind.
I like the idea of having extra protection on y electronic devices, but understand that there’s really no way to test these other than to trust the manufacturers claims. I would have liked to see some type of resettable built in surge protection, as it’s far more common to be subjected to surges than emps. Overall the unit does seem to be well constructed, and made fro quality components. But with a lack of real documentation of what is in the unit and what it does it is hard to ascertain if its doing anything.
Hogg Wyld –
Nice protection for my RV with all the lightning here!
This system is an excellent protection for my RV! We have a ton of lightning strikes in our area that happen all summer long, and the power is always disconnecting and reconnecting, sometimes several times in less than a minute. It was relatively simple to install this device for my RV’s electronics, and it has definitely provided peace of mind. It is also good to know that it protects against EMP’s since the state of the world lends itself to anything happening unexpectedly at any time. I am very pleased with the top notch build quality and protection this product provides, so it earns my five star blessing and recommendation for sure!
letmepicyou –
Well made, but I question the economics.
Among the myriad number of things I’ve done in my life, I’ve worked in electronics, from hand-insertion to hand-soldering, in a professional capacity. I say this, because I know a little bit about how electronics are actually built…what goes into their construction, component costs, ect.Where as nobody can deny the usefulness of a surge protector in any capacity, I really don’t see what could be in this that qualifies it for a $350 price tag. As I said, I’ve worked in electronics. So…I can imagine perhaps an RF choke coil on the cable coming in ($3), a bank of a dozen or so Varistors ($10-$15), a fiberglass circuit board with etchings…probably $4…A plug…$5…A power cable…$5…a few housings…$10…The point is, I see about $30-$40 worth of parts and they’re charging $350 for it. That’s all. I mean, everybody has to make a little profit, I get that, but…wow.In all, as I said, I’m a fan in general of surge protectors. And this one is made pretty darn well. But at the end of the day, I have a hard time justifying $350 for a bank of varistors. Varistors work well, and will shunt a huge load to ground if they’re hit hard. But they’re cheap and they break down over time and that makes the huge net cost here hard to swallow. I will always recommend some form of surge protection (usually in the form of a battery backup), but be aware that what’s being offered here might not be worth the cost.