
"The tag is made from a durable fiber reinforced composite body and the two parts are held together with four stainless steel fasteners that go into metal threaded inserts in the case. Water and dirt and other muck is kept out using a silicone gasket, creating a little armored tank for your AirTag, that is still discreet and doesn't scream, "This is valuable, that's why I've attached an AirTag to it!""
"The tag holder has been designed to allow as much of the device's chirp out as possible -- the makers say the sound is cut by about a third, and my testing suggests that's about right. This tag holder is made of the same fiber-reinforced composite as the TagVault Keychain Case, but it features an open-face design to maximize the loudness of the AirTag's chirp."
"However, this tag also features some neat anti-tamper measures. The cable used to attach it to items is a tough, polymer-coated, braided stainless steel wire, and the tag is held together using a T10 Torx (screwdriver provided). Again, this Torx has thread locking compound pre-applied, which is a nice touch. Not many people are going to be walking around with a T10 Torx screwdriver,"
Two TagVault AirTag holders provide robust physical protection and anti-tamper features. The Keychain Case uses a fiber-reinforced composite body secured by four stainless-steel fasteners into metal threaded inserts, plus a silicone gasket to keep out water and dirt while remaining discreet. Assembly requires tightening four screws and the design reduces the AirTag's chirp volume by about one-third. The Security Cable version shares the composite body but adds an open-face design to maximize chirp loudness, an IP68-rated sealed battery compartment, a polymer-coated braided stainless-steel cable, and a T10 Torx with pre-applied thread-lock for tamper resistance. A T10 Torx screwdriver is provided, making casual tampering less likely while adding effort to battery changes or device removal.
Read at ZDNET
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