Umbrella Stun Gun
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The Streetwise Tactical Stunbrella is a full-size, fully functional umbrella with a stun gun built into the shaft — the first product of its kind (patent pending). It measures 40 inches long, opens to a 51-inch two-person canopy that withstands gale-force winds, and the stun function works whether the umbrella is open, closed, or wet. Nobody looks twice at someone carrying an umbrella. That's 40 inches of reach you can carry in plain sight without anyone knowing it's a self-defense tool.
Umbrella Stun Gun Features and Specs
- 40-inch reach: Longer than any stun baton on the market — lets you deliver a stun from well outside arm's length
- Stun works in all conditions: Operates with the umbrella open or closed, and functions safely in rain — designed for real-world carry, not fair-weather use only
- Large shock area: Wider contact zone near the tip than standard stun guns — more surface means easier contact during a fast encounter
- 51-inch canopy diameter: Full two-person umbrella that handles gale-force winds — this is a real umbrella, not a prop
- Rubberized grip: Slip-resistant handle for a secure hold in wet conditions
- Rubber tip: Doubles as a walking stick for added stability on uneven ground
- Safety switch: Prevents accidental activation during carry
- USB-C rechargeable: Modern charging standard — cord included
- Protective carrying sleeve with shoulder strap: For transport when the umbrella isn't in active use
- One-year warranty
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Length | 40 inches |
| Canopy diameter | 51 inches (two-person) |
| Stun operation | Works open, closed, and in rain |
| Charging | USB-C (cord included) |
| Grip | Rubberized, slip-resistant |
| Tip | Rubber (walking stick capable) |
| Includes | Stunbrella, USB-C charging cord, carrying sleeve with shoulder strap |
The 40-inch reach changes the dynamic of a self-defense encounter. A standard stun gun requires you to be within arm's length — about 2-3 feet. The Stunbrella gives you over 3 feet of contact distance while your hand stays out of an attacker's range. The large shock area near the tip means you don't need precision aim during a chaotic situation. And because it's a real umbrella that you're already carrying, there's no draw time — it's in your hand before anything happens.
How does the Stunbrella compare to a stun baton?
Both give you extended reach, but the similarities end there. A stun baton is an obvious self-defense weapon — you can't carry one down the street without drawing attention. The Stunbrella looks like an umbrella because it is one. It also gives you more reach (40 inches vs. 12-26 inches for most batons), functions as weather protection, and works as a walking stick. The trade-off: stun batons typically deliver higher voltage and many electrify the shaft to prevent grab attempts. The Stunbrella's advantage is that you'll actually carry it daily because it serves a purpose beyond defense.
Does the stun function work in the rain?
Yes — it's specifically designed to operate in wet conditions. The stun contacts function whether the umbrella is open, closed, or soaking wet. This matters because most self-defense situations don't happen in ideal conditions. An umbrella you can't use as a stun gun in the rain would defeat the purpose of disguising a stun gun as an umbrella. The rubberized grip maintains traction when wet, and the electrical charge is directed through the contact area — not through the handle or canopy.
When is the umbrella stun gun not the right choice?
The Stunbrella is best for people who walk regularly — commuting, errands, dog walking, campus — and want protection integrated into something they'd carry anyway. It's not practical for situations where you need something pocketable or where carrying an umbrella would look out of place (indoors, at a gym, in summer heat). For compact concealed carry, a phone-disguised stun gun or a keychain model fits where an umbrella can't.