Electric Bug Killer
The hand held insect zapper is the best way of clearing the area around you of insects, especially the flying ones such as mosquitoes. The electric insect killer evaporates any insect from a mosquito to a gnat instantly on contact with a pleasingly loud, electrical ‘zap’!
However, this is not to say that the indoor insect zapper cannot be used outdoors, as long as it is not too wet. It should be treated like any other high voltage electrical equipment. Keep the indoor insect killer dry and please do not use it while you are standing in water!
Models do vary a lot, but there are basically only two types of hand held insect zapper: the battery operated bug zapper and the rechargeable electric bug zapper. Both are equally effective at zapping bugs and employ the same principle.
The hand held insect zapper looks like a ‘kids’ tennis racquet, but with three layers of ‘strings’, which are in fact wires. The innermost grid of wires becomes electrified at the touch of a button, while the other two grids, one on either side, are harmless earths.
When an insect is caught between the wires of the electric insect killer, it creates a short, which vaporizes it instantaneously with a loud crack. The electric bug killer will kill other bugs too, but they just fry rather than just disappear.
I have had the rechargeable type for more than five years and am extremely satisfied with the hand held bug killer. In fact, the electric bug zapper has come a long way over the last few years. A fully charged indoor insect zapper is powerful enough to last for a few hundred swipes and will hold it’s charge, if unused, for weeks without any noticeable discharge.
The rechargeable battery unit will put up with intensive use for the best part of a year, although its ability to hold a charge for several weeks slowly diminishes after six or seven months.
The most recent indoor insect killer I’ve had has a main on/off switch, a light that comes on when it is activated (the brightness of this light also indicates the battery’s strength) and a light that comes on when it is plugged in on recharge.
The instructions suggest that the bug zapper should be (re)charged for about sixteen hours. However, I usually put it on charge over night once or twice every week or two, although the indoor bug killer shows a large increase in performance after only a few hours recharging.
The latest version I’ve seen also comes with a strong light called a ‘headlamp’. I have found this very useful when walking in the garden, but I’m not sure whether it’s meant to lure the mosquitoes in the dark so that you can zap them if you’re feeling bored or just vindictive. You know, a bit like an Anglerfish.
I’ve used the headlamp on my electric bug killer for that reason as well, but the light uses a lot of battery power. All in all, the indoor bug zapper is a big asset at any outdoor event. The indoor bug zapper is useful to ‘clean out’ your bedroom before retiring; it’s unbeatable for evening mosquitoes and it will clear a lunch table of wasps too.
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