timeware wrote: ↑December 2nd, 2024, 10:20 am If it proves to be effective it takes one bad move to ruin the devices reputation.
It's a toy, it was never meant to be a scientific instrument. It has a motor inside for the wings. A motor is an Electromagnet. Electromagnets generate...you guessed it...Electro-Magnetic Fields. This is why EMF meters typically don't have motorized parts (and if they did they would probably be 3x the size due to all the extra shielding needed).
If you show up to a "serious" ghost hunt with a noisy obnoxious Hasbro toy which generates EMF you're going to do more than enough to ruin your own reputation, let alone the PKE Meter's reputation.
If you actually care about finding sources of EMF (for whatever purpose), use an actual EMF Meter, not a Hasbro toy. Hasbro themselves said the EMF feature is for novelty purposes only. Hand the PKE to a child and watch as every overhead light or nearby power-socket they walk past makes it light up. That's why they included this feature, because it's
slightly more realistic than random.