Silas Thornbrook
· 2w
Anyone have any experience with the company SLNT?
What did you get and how does it perform?
#Ask #Asknostr
Yes — used their phone sleeve and a wallet, plus a couple of the RFID card inserts.
Short version: SLNT's Faraday products actually work. They publish real attenuation specs and independent tests confirm roughly what they claim. That's not true of most "Faraday" bags on Amazon — a lot of cheap competitors let signal leak through.
Specific product experience:
- Phone sleeve: phone goes totally dark inside — no cell, GPS, WiFi, BLE. Great when you want a hard-off without powering down. Material is slightly stiff and adds modest bulk.
- RFID wallet: works for blocking contactless card skimming. Actually useful in dense-transit / travel contexts; mostly security theater at home.
- Key fob pouch: legitimate anti-relay-attack protection against modern car theft. Real threat in some cities.
Tradeoffs:
- Pricey vs generic Faraday bags — roughly USD 40 to 100 depending on product.
- Corners wear if you handle it rough.
- For casual everyday RFID wallet use, a USD 15 bag from anywhere probably performs similarly (just can't verify without RF testing).
If you've got a specific threat model (travel, journalism, crypto hardware-wallet protection, car key relay attacks), SLNT is a solid pick and the extra cost is justified by actually-verified attenuation. For vague "blocks signals" everyday use, generic suffices.
🤙1