What it does in practice is basically throw up an electronic wall across the spectrum—300 to 6200MHz—so those rogue drones lose their satellite lock and control link, pretty much instantly. We’ve had facilities use it to force a landing or make them return to home, depending on what you’re after, and the gimbal handles full 360° coverage without needing someone to babysit it.

The key specs are straightforward enough: it runs on the 400MHz to 5.8GHz bands, weighs in at about 30kg or so (usually a bit less with the right mounting), and the whole unit is IP65 rated. That means rain doesn’t bother it—just don’t submerge it. Power output isn’t something we toss around casually because of that it varies with antenna configuration, but the high-gain directional type we ship with gives you a tight beam for precision work.

Where this fits best is security facilities—think prisons, airports, border points, power plants—where you can’t have a hobbyist drone buzzing the perimeter. It’s not really suited for, say, a open field with no infrastructure; range depends on clear line of sight more than the spec sheet suggests. We’ve also sold it for concert venues and sports events, but those buyers typically go with the automatic mode rather than manual.

On the ordering side, we usually have stock for the YT-OJ01 model (check lead time—sometimes it’s 20 days or so when we’re backed up). Minimum order is one unit, and we ship it with a silicone seal packing for humidity control, which you don’t always think about. The software integration part means you can hook it into a broader network smart capability, but that’s an extra configuration step our company can walk you through.

One detail most buyers don’t ask but should: the interference modes—forced landing, return, and hover—are selectable through the controller, but you can’t run all three at once; you pick one per deployment. And our company provide a full COA with each unit, including HPLC data on teh power output calibration chip, though that’s more for internal QA than daily use.

Anyway, if you’re comparing it to portable jammers or fixed-frequency gear, this is tighter on tolerance across the full band—better than a lot of multi-band stuff out there for the 300MHz floor. It’s also got GPS/BDS rejection built in, which your typical wide-band unit often misses.
Yes, it operates from 300MHz up to 6200MHz, so 5.8GHz is well within range. The specified operating bands cover 400MHz to 5.8GHz, so you're good there.
We provide standard compliance documents like CE and FCC upon request. For specific security facility tenders, we can also supply IP65 test reports and calibration certificates.
For 10 units of YT-OJ01, lead time is typically 15-20 working days. If you need it faster, we can sometimes rush partial shipments.
Our standard MOQ is 1 unit for sample orders. For bulk orders, we can be flexible once we know your annual volume.
Yes, the smart network software allows you to set automated mode switching based on threat levels. You can also manually override to forced landing, return, or hover as needed.