 Hey, it's Alex here from alexfigures.com. Now, if you like the convenience of Wi-Fi, but are concerned about the potential damages that EMF brings to the body and to the home, then I've got something you're gonna love. It's this, the JRS ECO 100 wireless router. Now, I'm told that this is the world's first ECO, full ECO Wi-Fi router, with 100% radiation free in standby mode, 90% reduced beacon pulse frequency, and the ability to adjust the power output down in very low, little increment sizes, which is great. Plus, there's also an inbuilt Wi-Fi scheduler. So, what this device does is allows you to still use your iPad and your iPhone and other devices without cables. However, the EMF exposure is gonna be much lower. And even better, when you're not connected, like your iPad's not connected to the router and you're not actually using the router, then this device goes into standby mode, so it effectively switches off, meaning there's no pulsing, there's no EMF exposure, which is very, very cool. And the other function is the inbuilt Wi-Fi scheduler, which is very, very cool, because I know a lot of people put in, I don't know what the name of them, time is, electronic time is, you know, you plug them in the wall and you say turn the lights on at 10 AM and switch them off at 10 PM or you do it the other way around. But, you know, you can preset when electricity goes through the device. I know a lot of people do that with their wireless routers. The downside of that is that it cuts all power to the device. So, if you're like me and you are using Ethernet hard-wired, your main office computer is hard-wired in and then all of a sudden the power's cut, there's no internet at all. There's no wireless, great, but there's also no hard-wire connection. And what I'm going to do now is I'm going to do a quick comparison of the EMF output using my Kornet Li-Chos smog meter. So right now I've got my Nikkom wireless Wi-Fi router going on, a working web. It's about five meters from me right now. There's no devices connected to it at the moment, so I'm going to test the EMF level from that and then I'm going to plug in this thing, get it all set up and then do the same test. Now in theory is there's no devices going, the new one, the JRS should be zero, which is great because right now I'm being bombarded from EMF pulsing and God knows what these things do to us. But anyway, that's not what this video is going to be about. So hang around, I'm going to do some testing and then I'll do the comparison and then finally I'll wrap it all up after using this device for a couple of weeks and let you know what I think of it and how it's performed and where you can go to get one. All right guys, so I've been playing around with this new JRS ECO Wi-Fi router for a while now and I've been in the back end following this manual. So the Wi-Fi's all set up, connected all my devices. Now I want to show you one really cool feature, so don't worry too much about this, but this is the back end, this is all the settings where you can access the JRS ECO wireless firmware. I'll go through this in a little bit more detail shortly, but what I want to show you here is this sitting here. Jay, let's see if we can get this on screen. JRS ECO 100 timeout, all right. The range is 20 to 900 and these are seconds. Default is 120, so that's two minutes. What this means is, well, here we go, it's got a description right here. When no devices are connected to the ECO 100 router, this number and this number in seconds has passed, i.e. 20 seconds has passed, the router will go into standby. This is also the interval at which the registration list is updated with new devices. All right, so I've set that to 20, all right. So what it's gonna do, I'll just apply this real quick, what this will mean is when I turn off, when I disconnect this laptop, which is currently got my Wi-Fi running connected to this, I know I shouldn't be sitting right here with this, but hey, it's only for a few minutes and I wanted to do this video. When I turn this off, when I turn the Wi-Fi off, after 20 seconds, the Wi-Fi transmitter in this should stop. Now right here, you can see that my cornet EMF meter is going berserk, you know, I'm right next to it, of course it's gonna be high. So we're gonna leave this in here. Now I've turned off every other Wi-Fi device in my house. So no phones, you can see my phone is on airplane mode there. All other devices off, all right. So all going well. I'm testing this for the first time now actually. All going well. When I turn this off, after 20 seconds, this will turn off. All right, so I'm gonna get my timer ready. Sorry, this is bad, bad thing. All right, so I'm gonna get my timer ready. So we're gonna have the website up and running. And remember right now, this is pulsing away red, which is showing our strong signal. Now I'm gonna hit turn off Wi-Fi, boom, hit start on the clock. All right, now after 20 seconds, we should see this drop down, okay. So remember, and this is picking up microwave signals. You can see the pulsing there, 13 seconds in the background, 15, 16, 18. Let's see what happens. 20 seconds, boom, green, nothing. Very, very cool. So if we have a look at this, we can see Wi-Fi 5G and 2.4G are off. Very, very cool. So if this was hardwired into here through an ethernet cable such as this, which is what I will do, I'll use an ethernet cable from this going into my office computer for instance. I'd still be able to use the internet through my computer that's hardwired, but there's no Wi-Fi. You can see that is still right down. So just to show you, if I go to my site and then go to the new blog, nothing, all right. Now that is very, very cool. I'm impressed by that, which means, it means you can be using your device at night and then using your phone or your laptop and then be like, all right, I'm done. 9.30 at night, 10 o'clock. Just turn the Wi-Fi off on your device and you know that this will turn off, which is actually really, really cool. Now think of it, I know I talked earlier about this having an inbuilt scheduler, so you can set it so every night at 10 o'clock, it turns off and then turns back on at, say, 7 a.m., which is a cool feature in itself. But with this setup, you don't even need that scheduler because as long as you turn the Wi-Fi off on your devices, then that will turn off. So yeah, so now what I wanna do is show you what happens. Now, again, I'm testing this for the first time. What happens is when I turn the Wi-Fi back on here, it should send a signal to this device saying turn back on, all right, we need the internet. I don't know all the technical logic or how all this works, science behind it, but that's what this router does apparently. So I'm gonna go in here, turn, oh, sorry, my camera's got something missed here, turn Wi-Fi on. Okay, you're gonna see this pulse, boom, because that's coming from this. Now, we wait and see what's happened on here. And already the 2.4 gigahertz is running. So now when I type in a website, alexfix.com, good site, check it out if you haven't, it loads up. That is actually very, very cool. So I can read an article now. Yes, very, very, very, very cool. So all I have to do, once everything's set up, of course, all I have to do is turn the Wi-Fi on when I want Wi-Fi, turn the Wi-Fi off when I don't want Wi-Fi. So that means if there's no devices on, there is no, and you're seeing it here, now turn the Wi-Fi off after 20 seconds, there will be no EMF coming from that router. So 20 seconds should be coming up anytime soon. And there it is, oh, no, not quite. Okay, that was a long 20 seconds, maybe not. There it is, boom, off. That is, you know what? That is very, very cool. I am very impressed by that. All right, so I've just finished setting up the JRSEco wireless router. And to be honest, it wasn't too confusing. I was a little bit concerned at first, looking at having to flick through that the manual that came with it and all the settings and screens, et cetera. But fortunately, it was pretty straightforward. And even if you're not very switched on with computers and technology, the instruction manual is very well laid out. It's literally step-by-step, you know, type this in this box, click this link, and there's little screenshots and everything on the manual. To be honest, it's probably a little bit too comprehensive because that's why it's a bit off-putting when I picked it up. I was like, oh, there's like 30 odd pages here. But the good thing is, you know, all the detail was there. If you are a little bit nervous with this sort of stuff, just, you know, find someone who's a little bit more computer literate and literate and get them to do it, a teenager for instance, or someone who's a little bit more tech savvy. But again, it shouldn't be too complex with the manual. So that's all done. It took me, I don't know, maybe 20 minutes max. That included running around and changing all my devices to the new password, et cetera. So this is the backing. This is what you see when you do log in to the modem itself, the router, sorry. You can see here I've currently got two clients connected to my network or status of everything here. So what I wanted to show you though is the main thing to look at is in here. So we'll click wireless under advanced settings and then JRS. Okay, so this is the firmware that I've loaded on from JRS that makes this router so unit, it's the value add. It's why you pay the extra dollars to get this particular router over just every and every day router. So in here are all the cool settings. All right, so I'll just run through a few of them. I personally have disabled five gigahertz network and just used a 2.4. Five gigahertz is great for speed. The EMF levels are a little bit higher and the range isn't as great. For me, I don't need that super fast connection. I mean, my internet speed isn't even fast enough and I'm not doing massive data transfers on our home network. So I'm more than happy with the 2.4 gig. So that's just the personal thing I've done but just in case you're a little bit confused. So here, this is the standby sitting mode. You can change between various options or explains each option here. So for instance, when you're first sitting it up, you might change it to more of the beacon mode. I've just gone straight to four week mode, which is where the router switch the EMF, the Wi-Fi router, sorry, switches off when there's no signal on it, which is one of the cool features which I've just shown you before. The lock beacon mode, you can enable this if you want to set up the Wi-Fi router with new devices. You know, the first time you do it, for instance, or if you move it to a new home or something. But again, all the default settings work fine here. You don't have to worry about the match hidden network. Ignore connection requests for five gigahertz. I turn this on just because I'm not using five gigahertz, the scheduler. So I have this off, but you can turn it on, simply by clicking yes, and then going through and saying when you want the Wi-Fi router to be on or off. Now I was looking forward to using that setting. I thought it was going to be a cool setting, but after that recent clip of testing the activation, you know, how the laptop can, can automatically turn the Wi-Fi on and then it will turn off 20 seconds or whatever time you set it after the connection is, after the Wi-Fi is turned off on all devices. I don't think we're going to need that wireless scheduler. Maybe if you are in a home where you are always going to have some devices on, like say, for instance, you use a home security system and that uses your Wi-Fi network or maybe you've got like a media hub or you just know your kids aren't going to turn their Wi-Fi off on their laptop or phone or, I don't know, like, you know, if you just know you've got a smart device like a smart TV or a smart fridge or something and you just know that Wi-Fi transmitter in that device is always going to be on, then that standby mode, or which we were looking at before, isn't going to work, right? Because there's always going to be something transmitting to the Wi-Fi router. In which case this wireless scheduler would come in handy because you can set it so the Wi-Fi router turns off at 10 o'clock, Monday through to, say, three. All right, so you know when you go to bed, Wi-Fi's off and then maybe on the weekend it stays on a little bit longer. I don't know, you can play around with it, but I haven't used that because of the reason I've already went through. The timeout feature are 20 to 900. This is the seconds and again, I've explained this. I'm actually going to change this. Right now I'm going to put it up to 60 seconds because I'm going to go in and do some testing using my cornet meter. So this is the current modem wireless router that I have and you can see up the top there, we've got Wi-Fi 2.4 gigahertz running. I don't use the five gigahertz option. All right, so I've got my cornet litro smog meter running on the microwave sitting right now. Now this is showing units in milliwatts per meter squared and you'll see the color code on the side here. This unit has been set up for to reflect the building biology standards. Green is safe, yellow is dangerous, not ideal and red is very dangerous. Pretty much that means if you're exposed to this level right now, because it's smack bang in the orange, then yeah, it's not great for the body. Green would be okay and red would be, hey, this is really not good. So I'm about four or five meters from my Wi-Fi router at the moment. My standard Nikon run of the mill router that came with my network provider and there are no devices connected to it at the moment. So it's just doing its thing in the background. Now you can see on average that number is probably 0.02. It's fluctuated down to 0.018 and I saw it was 0.03 at one point before but it's pretty steady. You can see on that little graph there it's a pretty steady line. There's no big peaks or troughs and that's because there are no devices connected. But again, if I'm just sitting here I'm right in our living room right now. So yeah, we often are in this space. I'd be stressing the body. And then on the other side of this wall, on the other side of where the router is are our bedrooms. So again, five meters, I know at least two of our beds would be in that proximity. So again, you'd be exposing yourself to what the building biology has come out and said is a dangerous level. And again, if you're sleeping in that or even if you're just at this level all day it's not going to be great. Now another cool feature of this particular emif meter is the sound. So what I'm going to do is turn this on. See if I can remember how to do it. There we go. So you can actually hear the wildfire. This is the pulsing. Now it'd be interesting to see how many pulses that is because when I was reading the instructions for the JRS modem it said that typically modems pulse 10 times a second. So I wonder if that's about 10 times anyway but their one's much less than that. So that pulsing is another vibration that is not going to be great. One other thing I just want to show you is I just turned on the five gigahertz network because usually I just run the 2.4. This is with my current modem, all right? Not the JRS one. And you can hear if you listen to this that pulsing is much faster because I know the five gigahertz network is a lot more intense and there's a lot more speed but the range isn't as good. That's why most people still use 2.4 because you get better range. And I know I've just used 2.4 because it's a little bit lower EMF but it's interesting hearing that difference. So what I'm going to do now is compare the signal strength of the new JRS Eco wireless using my corner EMF meter and compare that to the old router I had. So all going well because of all these cool settings and following all these instructions in this booklet, the level should be lower and much safer, which means that not only do we have that cool feature I've just explained, but it also means that when this thing is working, it's going to cause less stress on the body. So yeah, looking forward to that, very cool. All right, the moment of truth. So now what I've done is I've got the JRS Eco Wi-Fi router operational, it's running, the Wi-Fi on my old router is not on anymore and the only device connected to the router is my laptop. Okay, so what I have done is, you saw me change that setting. So there's going to be a 60 second period where I can test the EMF exposure. I'm in exactly the same spot as I was when I tested my original router. One thing I should answer because I know some people were probably thinking, well, if you got that standby feature, why does it matter what the background, how powerful, how damaging the JRS EMF mode is? Because it's just going to switch off when no one's using it. And that's a good question. The reason I want to do this test, there's two reasons. One is like I said before, not everyone is going to use the standby feature. If you've got a fridge always connected to it, you're always going to be exposed to that router, right? So I want to test it for that. And some people will want to buy this router purely because the EMF exposure should be lower, all right? And that's, I mean, I would have bought it just for that reason alone. The standby feature is like a really cool bonus feature. And secondly is even if you're using the network, using the Wi-Fi, like you've got a computer or you got your phone or whatever, then you still want to have a lower transmission intensity coming from the router. Or for instance, if your partner is using the Wi-Fi in the living room and you're in the kitchen, again, you're going to be exposed to that, right? So the lower, the better. So anyway, what I'm going to do now is I'm going to flip this camera around. I'm going to turn off the Wi-Fi on my laptop. And then, so that will mean there's no interference from the laptop because that's obviously putting a lot of EMF right now. And then I'm going to use this and compare it to my previous numbers. All right, let's go. All right, so here we go. So currently the laptop is on. We're going to turn the Wi-Fi off on this to avoid any interference. And then we're going to get 60 seconds to test the number on here. All right, let's get this sitting right. Okay, so remember the Wi-Fi router is still on. Just my laptop is off. And you can see that background level is very, very low. It's crazy low. And that's pulsing. Crazy. I'm kind of like, is it really pulsing? But it has to be pulsing because there's a 60-second turn off in this video. So I'm going for 40 seconds. So in fact, we'll see what happens when it gets to 60, it should drop even lower. So that is .003, roughly that's what the average is here. Compare that to the old router I had, you know, the everyday router, it was like .02. So about 10 times less. It's quite incredible actually. And there we go. You can see it's been a minute now and it's dropped right down. So it was running. Now we're like .0006. And you can see there's no movement there. That's incredible. So, and that was in the green zone. I don't know if you noticed that, but that was in the green, which is like set by the building biology standards. That was in the green time the whole time. So that was with a Wi-Fi router, only three, four, five meters, and it wouldn't even be five meters. It'd be three meters away with one thin wall in between us. It's just one sheet of gibrock. Like that's all it is on the other side of the cupboard. That's incredible. So now remember if I turn this back on, you're going to see it spike up. I just turned the laptop Wi-Fi router back on. So you're going to see it spike because that's the laptop Wi-Fi kicking in right now. And that's now setting the router to be running again. So again, just to retest this, I'm going to get 60 seconds from the time I turned this off. Wi-Fi on the laptop is off and straight away, we're right down. Look how low that is. And remember this is a Wi-Fi router that reaches right through this house and outside. And look how low that is. And again, comparing that to a low of 0.01 up to 0.05 on the old router. Okay, so now what I want to do is compare the audible sound rate to the original router. So this should be a much lower, slower clicking. All right, let me just figure out how to get this on. So that clicking is the transmission, the pulsing from the router. So I just turned the Wi-Fi off again. So we've got 60 seconds before it will stop. And you can see how it's like pretty much non-existent. We'll just do a quick flashback, cut back to the original router where it was quite fast clicking. All right, so you can hear that it's quite a sharp and drastic difference between the two of them, isn't it? That's, it's quite amazing. So that's the pulse rate setting. So JRC that with their software, the pulse rate setting is like 90% lower than usual. But I mean, you listen to that and it's a huge difference. Which is very cool, very, very cool. So I think the Wi-Fi has now turned off. All right, so 60 seconds has been up and now the Wi-Fi router is off completely. And you can hear there is absolutely no clicking. Now, if you look at the bottom right hand corner, you can actually see this show, that little graph shows the spikes and intensity. Okay, so the spikes are very, very low. But you can see when the router has switched off because it's flat lined for the last like 67% of that X-axis, the graph down there. So if we compare that visual graph to the old router, these peaks here were pretty much solid. You couldn't see the spaces there. So again, all of this is good news for those who want to minimize EMF exposure. Like I said so many times now, I am very quite surprised by how dramatic these numbers are, like how much lower they are. I really didn't expect something to be that low. So that's a wrap. I've finished my testing. I've been using this new JRS Eco wireless router for a while now. And I have to say, it is very, very cool. In fact, it is going to be one of my top products for the year from a health by hacking wireless point of view because now with this router and the software that the JRS team have installed on it and have created for it, it means you can still use Wi-Fi. You can still roam around the house on your laptop, on your phone, using your smart TV, whatever you want. But know that not only is the signal, the EMF signal from that router so much lower, like ridiculously low, 10 times lower. But you know, as soon as you turn those devices off, as in you're not using your Wi-Fi anymore, the router will turn off, which is cool. And then as soon as you want to use your Wi-Fi again, you turn your device on, you turn Wi-Fi on and boom, the router will start working. Like it's amazing how they've achieved to build this. I mean, I know they didn't build the device itself, the hardware itself, but to come up with the software for this is very incredible. So yeah, I mean, if you want to get one of these units, I'll put a link below. I don't know what else to say. If you have any questions, feel free to leave them below and I'll do my best to cover it. I'm going to put together a written blog review on this as well over at AlexFegus.com, so be sure to hit over there and check that out. If you want a bit more details though, I know this has been rather comprehensive video anyway. And be sure to like this video if you want to see more videos like this, reviewing products, gadgets, sharing tips on how to improve your health and your home health environment, et cetera. Be sure to subscribe and be sure to say hi as well because it's always cool to hear from you. But yeah, don't check it out. I highly recommend getting one of these for the expense, for the price you pay. It's probably, it may be the best bang for your buck from a health point of view. I mean, we're not talking thousands of dollars to get like a red light panel, so I'd swear by them anyway. And you're not talking hundreds of dollars to get like an aura ring that's going to track your sleep. This is something that's going to impact every single moment of your health when you're at home. I mean, it'd be cool if every house had one of these. I mean, imagine if you live in an apartment, how there'd be much less exposure from EMF, but I know that's not going to happen. But anyway, highly recommend it. If you've got any questions, be sure to ask me below. I'll put a link to the router, and we can buy the router below as well. And be sure to subscribe. All right, signing out, bye.