Well this changes... EVERYTHING!
- Renaye Stokes
- May 8, 2018
- 2 min read

What if you could just swap your router and significantly reduce radiation exposure for your family! Well! You can! And there is a discount code!
Jan-Rutger Schrader, PhD has written his own software and put it on this sturdy ASUS router to reduce the radiation by 90% in standby mode and enable you to schedule when you want wireless on and when you want it automatically turned off. Or there is a manual wireless on/off button. You can also choose the power level (strength/length of signal). This unit plugged seamlessly into a Skymuster black box and functioned immediately. I have installed two of them today. Super impressed.
The image above is my test in my home. I certainly felt the difference in pressure on my head when I turned the Netgear on – wow. The old and new routers were both in our office in the same spot and turned on independently. They had to get though a 30cm thick rock wall to get to my iPhone in the kitchen streaming SoundCloud. The old Netgear doesn’t have enough signal length to get to our bedrooms. We always leave it with the wifi switched off. The JRS eco made it to our bedrooms easily at full signal strength so there is room to wind it back a bit (again... hats off to JRS for this versatile software) and reduce exposure even further! Wow! This changes... well... everything! The JRS eco router gives off less radiation than my portable speaker on Bluetooth mode...
What’s more, in the box there was a card with a 7.5% discount code "lessradiation". Enjoy! Rally together and minimise shipping from Europe. These units aren't cheap ($131-$355 AU plus shipping) but wow is the difference significant. While you are there, check out the Ethernet to Lightening cable adaptor – absolute winner - especially for big iTunes backups or downloads! Flight mode + cables are always the least exposure option but this router is da bomb for when you really do need to be mobile! Remember - household wifi is WAY safer than 3G/4G direct to device. Radiation is cumulative so every little bit counts!
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