They work similar to stun guns.
The way a stun gun or baton works is by overloading your muscles with oscillating signals telling them to tense up. The voltage just determines how painful it will be. It doesn't affect the effectiveness of the weapon.
Yes, stun guns are legal to carry in Texas, unless the stun gun is in the shape of an item that is already deemed illegal to carry, such as a baton, sap, or brass knuckles.
Not in the UK they don't ! The 'regular' police are limited to carrying a truncheon or baton, and a CS spray. Specialist (firearms) officers can carry hand-guns, automatic rifles and stun-guns.
I, you, we, they stun. He, she, it stuns.
The past tense of stun is stunned
A stun gun has two numbers associated with it's power. The first is amps. Stun guns run about 3-4 milliamps. A full amp will kill someone and AED's run as high as 500. So a stun gun won't even mess up a pacemaker, much less cause arrhythmia or death. The second number is voltage. This is the number you see plastered across ads for stun guns. It really doesn't have much to do with the stopping power or a stun gun, but the higher voltage guns do work quicker and might possibly work better through thicker clothes.
Baton Baton Mein was created in 1979.
The music conductor's stick is a baton.Assuming you meant 'what is a conductor's stick called' - it's a baton.
you have to be 16 years of age and older.
Children on Stun ended in 1998.
Children on Stun was created in 1991.
A stun gun cannot effectively be used through walls. Stun guns deliver an electric shock through direct contact with the target, requiring the prongs to touch the skin for the device to function properly. Walls act as a barrier that prevents the electrical charge from reaching a person on the other side. Therefore, direct contact is essential for the stun gun to work.