• Beauty in old stuff
    When it comes to the art of restoration work, Cat Anderson plies her craft in many directions. This highly experienced home restorer takes delight in a wide variety of rehabilitative projects. Whether painstakingly applying period wallpaper, removing multiple coats of paint from century-old woodwork, restoring a stained-glass window, rewiring antique light f […]
  • 6 Shares That Could Save Your Retirement
    These mid-sized companies have great dividend paying records, and could be just the ticket for your retirement portfolio.
  • Message in a bottle – times two
    We’ve all heard the stories of ancient, barnacle-encrusted bottles washing up on shore and the lucky passerby who stumbles upon the romantic message inside. Brentwood resident Jeff Emanuel knows first hand about serendipitous scrawlings because it happened to him not just once, but twice.
  • Geocaching: A Modern Day Treasure Hunt
    It’s a phenomenon that’s sweeping the world, and if you do it once, I guarantee you will do it again. Geocaching (pronounced “geo-cashing”) is a game, or more specifically, a treasure hunt. Your treasure map? A global positioning system (GPS).
  • 6 Stocks That Could Save Your Retirement
    Tomorrow's winners will come from where you least expect them.
  • Story of Florida town Rosewood emerges from ground
    The persistent historian dug through a carpet of pine needles in the Central Florida woods as he sea
  • Is county’s future buried in Bath?
    Editor’s note: This begins a two-part series. The series concludes Tuesday. Near Archbell Point on Bath Creek lie the buried remains of what may be Secotan — the best-documented, “prehistoric” Indian village in America, according to area historians, archaeologists and local lore.
  • Letters
    Undercover Racist? I picked up a copy of the August 19 Reader today. It’s well known within the African-American community that the Reader is very adverse to and against having black faces in your paper, but to see your cover — “I Don’t Know What They Told You, But This Is Called Hip Hop” — and to not have a black person on the cover.
  • The recipe for tough times? Strike it rich
    At a time when even those willing to work cannot find jobs, it is tempting to dream of easy ways to make money — quickly and with minimal effort
  • Information Architecture: How To Improve Content Findability On Your Web Site - Part 1
    How can you leverage information architecture to improve content findability and facilitate online content exploration on your web site? Making all the bits of your content you have published easily findable to your readers is not an easy task, especially when you have a large amount of content items that needs to be indexed and made searchable. Photo credit […]

Archive for the ‘Hand Held Metal Detectors’ Category

Hand Held Metal Detectors: Security Essentials

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

As well as in schools and government buildings etc, hand held metal detectors are often an important part of security procedures.

In today’s society, we all need to do everything we can to protect our loved ones and ourselves. A great method of locating and preventing the use of dangerous items such as handguns or knives is the hand held metal detector.

In countless places all over the country, including courtrooms, warehouses, jails, airports, schools, embassies, correctional facilities, hospitals, nuclear power plants, venues for special events and more—security operations rely on the use of hand held metal detectors.

Although primarily used for security, hand held metal detectors can also be used for recreation. Searching for hidden items at home, at the beach or in even in the park. This website includes the largest conglomerate of information on hand held metal detectors including the latest, most technologically advanced metal detectors available.

As most technological equipment rapidly advances, so does the science behind the making of the metal detector. And as sorry as it is to have to admit that we, as Americans may actually need this much protection, it is as the saying goes—“better safe than sorry” when it comes to safety and security.

There have been several events in current history that have made us aware of the unfortunate necessity of having hand held metal detectors available for all kinds of facilities. The ones we fear most, being the airports—if terrorists are going to try another attack on our country, many believe that they are likely to strike from the air. Since the 9/11 attacks this country has felt more fearful, flying, and airport security has tightened immensely. Part of this advancement in airport security is the re-enforced reliability of hand held metal detectors to prevent disaster.

Along with catastrophic dangers from the sky, somehow children and young adults have been able to access guns, knives and other weapons and have become a danger to themselves and to their classmates in schools—and criminals attempt to bring weapons into government facilities, banks stores etc.

The need for hand held metal detectors is as essential now as it ever was, and there are all kinds of metal detectors to suit the specific needs you need to meet for your security objectives.

Anne Clarke writes numerous articles for websites on gardening, parenting, fashion, personal safety, and home decor. Her background includes teaching and gardening. For more of her articles on safety and security please visit metal detectors.

The Benefits of Hand-held Metal Detectors

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

Hand-held Metal Detectors are designed to safeguard security-sensitive areas like schools, courtrooms, corrections facilities, sports events, businesses, nightclubs, bars and other public areas and events. They are used along with walk-through metal detectors. Construction crews and woodworkers also use hand-held metal detectors to find dangerous nails or other metallic debris in reclaimed building materials and trees.

A recent study proves that hand-held metal detectors are just as accurate as x-rays in finding coins and other metallic objects swallowed by children. They are cheaper and radiation-free, are usually lightweight, highly sensitive and require little maintenance. The special shape of the sensitive surface makes operation of the device easy, unlike portable metal detectors with ring transducers. They come with 9V batteries or rechargeable NiMH batteries.

Hand-held metal detectors are most commonly used for body searches for weapons in crowd control, and checking parcels and letters. Garret manufactures some of the best hand-held scanners in the world. The Garrett Enforcer G-2 is the smallest body scanner and sensitive enough to detect even the smallest of knives or guns. The most popular one is the Super Scanner. It can detect hatpins as small as one inch.

When hand-held detectors are switched on, a red signal pattern in transmitted from the coil to the ground. When the signal comes in contact with a metal, it interrupts the signal and the detector alerts the user with an audio signal and flashing lights. Hand held detectors are of various types — commercial, professional, all-purpose, beach, gold metal, relic metal and 2-box deep searchers.

Metal Detectors Info provides detailed information about walk-through, hand-held, and used metal detectors, as well as reviews of best metal detectors. Metal Detectors Info is the sister site of Security Cameras Web.