What Is Pepper Spray?
All new 10% OC (Oleoresin Capsicum) formula @ 2 million Scoville Heat
Units and asome, unbeatable Fox 2% (even faster acting) OC (Oleoresin
Capsicum) formula @ 5.3 million Scoville Heat Units with identifying
ultraviolet dye. It is the strongest OC formula allowed by law.
Non-toxic and non-flammable. Effects last for 20 to 90 minutes.
Units can be fired many times and have a range of 8 to 20 feet, depending on model.
OC is a derivative of HOT CAYENNE PEPPERS and is the newest defensive
spray agent. It is not an irritant like the tear gases, but an inflammatory
agent. Contact with mucous membranes (eyes, nose, throat and lungs) will
cause IMMEDIATE dilation of the capillaries of the eyes, resulting in
TEMPORARY BLINDNESS and instant inflammation of the breathing tube tissues,
cutting off ALL BUT LIFE-SUPPORT BREATHING. OC will not deteriorate with age
and unlike the tear gasses, WILL NOT CAUSE LASTING AFTEREFFECTS.
One of the biggest misconceptions about
defense spray is that the higher the
percentage, the hotter and better it works. In most cases this could not be
further from the truth. Most of the best, fastest incapacitating sprays in
the world are from 2%-10%. The lighter the fluid, the faster is penetrates
the membranes. The percentage has nothing to do with the actual SHU or "hot"
in the spray. Also, thicker sprays can inflame the skin area more and last
longer with this unnecessary inflammation.
A good spray will put the
attacker down and out allowing you to escape or take control of the
situation.
Because it is an inflammatory, rather than an irritant, OC is effective
against all those who feel no pain such as psychotics, drunks and drug
abusers. OC has proven itself to be the ABSOLUTE BEST DETERRENT available
for attacking dogs and
wild animal control.
Another major advantage of OC is that it is not volatile and will not emit a lot of fumes like
tear gases.
The term OC (oleoresin capsicum) is a horticultural term which refers to
chili peppers. There are many different kinds of chili peppers ranging from
jalapenos, chiletpin, and cayenne to habaneros. They all have one thing in
common. They all contain a substance that is very powerful -- an alkaloid
called capsaicin (cap-say-a-sin). Just a single drop of tasteless and
odorless capsaicin in 100,000 drops of water and the heat can be noticeable.
In fact, capsaicin can be detected by humans at one part per ten million!
Capsaicinoids are produced by a gland in the pepper's placenta, which is
the top partition just below the stem. This is also where the seeds are
attached. The placenta is about 16 times stronger than any other part of the
plant, any OC spray worth its salt
will use its active ingredient made from this part.
Back in 1912, a pharmacologist named Wilbur Scoville came up with the
standard for measuring the power of capsaicin. Called the Scoville
Organoleptic Test, it was needed to calculate the temperature of peppers
used in many pharmaceutical products of the time (such as "Heet" which was
used for the relief of sore muscles, arthritis pain and muscular sprains).
Scoville measured the ground pepper into a mixture of sugar, water and
alcohol. Then, a panel of five tasters sipped the mixture and gave it a
grade; it took a majority of three to assign a value.
Today, the value is established through high technology, a computerized
method called high-performance liquid chromatography. The pepper scale
ranges from zero Scoville unit for a bell pepper to 5,000 or so for a
jalapeno to a whopping 200,000 - 300,000 for a habanero! Pure capsaicin is
15,000,000. The oleoresin capsicum used in a
superior pepper spray formula
is derived from the
hottest peppers and further processed and refined until the heat rating is
5,300,000 (5.3 million!).
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