Bet it won't jam my 12 gauge. Plus, I have a landline phone.
Terry
I looked up the frequency used by ring and similar devices. 2.4ghz.
I don't know what power level it would take to jam them, but it must not be too high. Imagine 50 watts of microwave in your hands.
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The jammer would only have to put out a little more than the device being jammed, if it's in reasonable proximity. The receiver is going to look at the strongest signal. The jamming signal would have to be somewhat broadbanded to cover the various frequencies within the 2.4 gHz band.
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If I recall, it had 3 or 4 antennas on it, one for each band it's supposed to block. So it has a separate transmitter for each antenna. Big city police agencies use trunked 800 mHz systems, which would be a lot harder to block.
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Yes, the trunked systems hop frequencies frequently. That was one of the issues Motorola was having trouble with as transmitter and receiver have to make the same hop at the same time.
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