Hey, if it works..... How about undiluted peppermint oil?How about a crotch shot. I've gotten tea tree shampoo down there and that will light you up.
Hey, if it works..... How about undiluted peppermint oil?How about a crotch shot. I've gotten tea tree shampoo down there and that will light you up.
Now you're just toying with my emotions....I love being many kinds of nerds. It always has helped during life when I wore my pocket protector and this plastic glasses complete with the tape holding them together at the nose piece. I am the female Eddie Deezen.
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I've wondered as well. I'm guessing that they want the cops to know that the non-lethal stuff can stop someone, and how well they work. Build confidence in their equipment. It's the only reason that I can think of.Here's one thing I've never understood. What idiot figured out that police officers need to be pepper sprayed and tazed in order to qualify for their use? Following that logic a recruit should be shot with a 9 mm handgun, shotgun and rifle to qualify in their use.
As a general rule it's not a good idea to use indoors, others will be affected and that will cause all kinds of other problems. People will be teary eyed and coughing as the A/C or other means passes it throughout the building. Maybe issue only to the outside guards. Buy some practice stuff that's free of the pepper chemical and train how to hose someone down and not get the sprayer person or others affected.SO, to get back to the original question... who has experience with various pepper sprays.
I'm on my churches safety team and our new chairmen is interested in finding the best one out there.
I only have some very limited experience with the before mentioned. Sabre Red Gel stuff....
We have decided it would be best to have on hand some but if at all possible concentrated and easy to direct and not disperse in a cloud.
At my agency we issued OC foam. Now retired over six years I don't recall the brand. The good part is that we could use it in an enclosed environment with no cross contamination. The down side was you had to hit the eyes, there was no effect on the respiratory system. Conservatively counting I probably used it 75-100 times. My observation is that it was about 80% effective. By that I mean that the subject being sprayed either stopped fighting or their ability to effectively resist was diminished. The other 20%? They had to be controlled by more forceful means.SO, to get back to the original question... who has experience with various pepper sprays.
I'm on my churches safety team and our new chairmen is interested in finding the best one out there.
I only have some very limited experience with the before mentioned. Sabre Red Gel stuff....
We have decided it would be best to have on hand some but if at all possible concentrated and easy to direct and not disperse in a cloud.