Auntie Sherry
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2010
- Messages
- 133
Does anyone know if you can wear your MB through body scanners and metal detectors? I was hoping to put mine on before leaving home.
Thanks for any help.
Thanks for any help.
I don't think I'd risk it. We had ours in our carry on and put them on when we got to MCO. It survied the regular xray machine.
I know pacemakers go through those scanners but still...... I'm not sure how RFID would stand up to a stronger power of scanner.
I'd ask.
These machines won't harm the bands. Lots of passports have a RFID chip, as do credit cards, keys, etc. and go through X-ray machines at airports every day.
Once again, there should be no problem wearing these. In the worst case, you'll have to remove it and put it through the X-ray machine; no problem.
I don't know why you couldn't. You don't have to remove watches or bracelets.
I think the OP was talking about the walk through scanners not the xray machines. Mine did go through the xray, I did not attempt to walk through the scanners. They don't let you take your passport through the scanner and while you can wear your watch it's not RFID, so I'm thinking that the rfid might be a no go.
I have held my passport and boarding pass in my hand in the scanners.
I believe most TSA agents (except possibly those working at MCO) have no idea yet what a magic band is or that it has an RFID chip. Anyway, this really is a non-issue! Just take it off if asked.
Correct me if I'm wrong (and I know y'all will), but if it can handle going through the xray machine in your carryon, it can handle going through the scanning machine on your body if they'll let you wear it. Because, and again, correct me if I'm wrong, aren't the scanners LESS radiation than the proper xray machine? (I don't go through the scanner, preferring to be tickled by TSA people, but I still say it's less radiation than a normal carryon xray machine)
And even if you put it in checked luggage, it still gets xrayed, doesn't it? Just behind the scenes?
Kind like when you put a credit card on the scanner at the grocery or in a pocket with your cell phone and it fries the strip.
David J. Brenner, the Higgins Professor of Radiation Biophysics at Columbia University, explained quite simply in an interview with NPR late last year that "both [scanning technologies] work on the same basic principle of firing a beam of radiation at the individual and looking at what it's reflected back, quite similar to radar or sonar, but in one case using millimeter waves, which are not so different from microwaves, in fact, and the other uses X-rays."