Repeller Stun Baton
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Most dogs break off an approach the moment they hear the electric arc of a shock stick — the sound alone is enough. The Repeller is a 12-inch stun baton built specifically for that scenario: deterring aggressive dogs on walks, runs, and delivery routes, with 40 million volts and 4.6 milliamps available if a dog or human threat doesn't back down. Anti-grab strips run the length of the barrel so it can't be turned against you, and a disable pin on the wrist strap cuts all functions if the baton is pulled away. It's the most practical dog taser stick available for daily outdoor carry — holster included, rechargeable, lifetime warranty.
Repeller Shock Stick for Dogs — Features and Specs
- 40,000,000 volt stun: 4.6 milliamps — powerful enough to daze and temporarily immobilize on contact with a dog or human attacker
- Anti-grab strips: Electrified strips run the length of the barrel — shock anyone attempting to grab or wrestle the baton away from you
- 120-lumen flashlight: Three modes — high beam, low beam, strobe — for illumination at night or disorientation before contact
- Wrist strap with disable pin: Pin detaches if the baton is taken from you, instantly disabling both stun and flashlight functions
- Rubberized grip: Non-slip coating for secure hold under stress or in wet conditions
- Rechargeable: Charging cable included — no batteries to replace
- Nylon holster included: Belt carry holster for hands-free transport between encounters
- Lifetime warranty
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Length | 12 inches |
| Diameter | 1.5 inches |
| Voltage | 40,000,000 volts |
| Amperage | 4.6 milliamps |
| Flashlight | 120 lumens, 3 modes |
| Weight | 1.15 lbs |
The 12-inch reach is the practical advantage here — long enough to make contact with a dog before it reaches your legs, short enough to carry in a holster on a belt without getting in the way. Dog walkers, joggers, cyclists, and delivery drivers who cover the same routes daily tend to keep this clipped on rather than buried in a bag. The strobe mode gives you one more option before you need to use the stun: a disorienting flash at close range stops many dogs cold without any contact at all.
Best Stun Gun for Dog Attacks — How the Repeller Compares
For dog deterrence specifically, the Repeller's design decisions matter more than raw voltage. The 12-inch barrel keeps your hand away from the dog's mouth while still making contact. The anti-grab strips mean you don't lose your advantage if a dog clamps on and pulls. The disable pin means a worst-case scenario — baton yanked away — doesn't leave you disarmed by your own tool. Most compact stun guns designed for human self-defense lack all three of those features. If your primary concern is dog attacks on a walking or delivery route, this is a more purpose-built choice than a pocket stun gun. For a non-contact option at greater range, an ultrasonic dog chaser works up to 50 feet and pairs well with this as a backup.
Do stun guns work on dogs?
Yes — and they're often more effective on dogs than on humans. Dogs have a lower tolerance for electrical stimulation than people do, which means the deterrent effect kicks in faster and at lower contact duration. In most real encounters, contact isn't even necessary: activating the baton produces a loud electrical crack and a visible arc that causes most dogs to stop and retreat immediately. That sound and light response is a conditioned fear reaction — dogs associate it with a threat and back off. If a dog does make contact with the activated baton, the shock interrupts the attack and creates enough distance to get clear. The 12-inch reach means you can make that contact before the dog reaches your body.
Will a stun gun stop a dog that's already attacking?
In most cases, yes. A dog mid-charge that makes contact with an activated stun baton will break off the attack — the shock causes involuntary muscle reaction and disorientation that interrupts the behavior. The key factor is reach: a 12-inch baton lets you make contact at the dog's shoulder or neck before it closes the last few feet to your legs or hands. A pocket stun gun requires the dog to already be on you. The anti-grab strips on the Repeller also matter here — a dog biting down on the barrel rather than the tip will still receive the shock, which a smooth-barrel baton doesn't provide. For walkers who want a deterrent before a dog ever gets close, pairing this with a dog pepper spray at 10 feet gives you two layers of response.