First charge
The Shield ships at roughly 50% charge. Before its first field deployment, top it off via the USB-C port. Full charge from empty takes about 3 hours from any standard USB-C charger (5V/2A); fast charging is not supported by design — we'd rather have a battery that lasts 5 years than one that charges in 30 minutes.
Indicator LED behavior: solid red while charging, solid green at full charge. If the LED is flashing red on charge, see troubleshooting below.
Field deployment
Activate
Press and hold the power button for 2 seconds. The status LED pulses olive-green to confirm activation. The heating element warms the cartridge over about 60 seconds; the protection zone is fully developed within 2 minutes.
Position
The protection zone is roughly a 15-foot radius around the unit, with the active envelope shaped by wind direction. Place the Shield slightly upwind of where you'll be sitting — the active compound drifts downwind into your protected area. In dead-still air, central placement works fine.
Wait before moving
The protection zone takes about 5 minutes to fully establish. If you move the Shield to a new spot, give it another 5 minutes before assuming you're covered. Moving every few minutes (for example, walking with the Shield clipped to your belt) generally doesn't establish a protection zone — the unit works best stationary.
Deactivate
Press and hold the power button for 2 seconds to power down. The element cools rapidly; you can drop the Shield in a pocket within 60 seconds of shutdown.
Cartridge swap
Each cartridge lasts approximately 12 hours of active use. The Shield will beep three times and the LED will pulse amber when the cartridge has 30 minutes of runtime remaining.
- Power down the Shield. Let it cool for 60 seconds.
- Twist the cartridge cap counter-clockwise 1/4 turn and lift.
- Drop the spent cartridge into household trash. (The active compound is environmentally inert at the small per-cartridge dose.)
- Drop a fresh cartridge in. Twist the cap clockwise 1/4 turn until it clicks.
- Power on. The new cartridge is recognized within 5 seconds; the LED returns to pulsing olive-green.
The seal is one-way. Once a cartridge has been opened and used, it can't be safely re-sealed for later. If you swap a cartridge with significant life remaining, mark the side with a Sharpie and use it next session — once exposed to air, the active compound degrades faster than during sealed storage.
Cold weather
The Shield operates between 25°F and 110°F ambient. Below 25°F:
- Battery capacity drops to roughly 60% of rated runtime — same as any lithium battery in cold.
- The heating element takes longer to warm the cartridge (up to 3 minutes vs. 1).
- The protection zone shrinks slightly because of slower compound dispersion in cold air.
Keep the Shield in an inside jacket pocket between deployments to keep the battery warm. The compound itself is freeze-stable indefinitely.
Hot weather
Above 95°F ambient, runtime is essentially unchanged; battery efficiency actually peaks around 80°F. The only hot-weather note: don't leave the Shield in a closed car in direct sun — the cabin can exceed 140°F, which damages the lithium cell. A few hours at extreme heat reduces battery lifespan; a full day will measurably shorten it.
Storage between trips
Short trips (under a month away): leave a partly-used cartridge in the unit, store anywhere room-temperature, no special precautions. Long storage (3+ months): remove the cartridge (seal it in the plastic bag it shipped in), bring the battery to about 60% charge, and store in a cool, dry spot. Don't store at full charge for months at a stretch — lithium batteries hold capacity longer when stored partly charged.
Troubleshooting
Won't turn on
Most often the battery is depleted — plug it in and look for the solid red LED. If the LED stays off even when plugged in, try a different cable and charger. Halt Shield uses standard USB-C; any phone charger works.
Turns on but no warm cartridge
Verify the cartridge cap is locked (clockwise 1/4 turn until it clicks). The unit detects an unlocked cap as a safety fault and disables the heater. If the cap is clicked in and the heater still won't engage, that's a warranty claim — email [email protected].
Bugs still biting
Most common cause is wind: the unit was placed downwind of where you're sitting, so the active compound is drifting away from you. Move the Shield upwind. Second most common: the unit hasn't been on long enough — give it a full 5 minutes after warm-up. Third: the bugs in question are outside our design envelope (we work against most flying biting insects; ticks, no-see-ums, and aggressive horseflies are partially or not addressed).
Runtime drops below 10 hours per cartridge
This is a degraded cartridge — usually from being opened, partly used, and stored without resealing for a long time. Swap to a fresh cartridge from a sealed bag. If runtime still doesn't recover, contact warranty.
What voids the warranty
- Submerging the unit. Rain-rated, not submersion-rated.
- Dropping onto rocks. The housing cracks; battery cell may detach internally.
- Opening the housing. Visible tamper seal — once broken, the warranty is void.
- Using non-Halt cartridges. Third-party cartridges damage the heating element by running at the wrong temperature range.
- Leaving it in a hot car for a full day. Battery damage; the warranty rejects claims that look like thermal abuse.
Questions?
If the Shield is doing something unusual and this guide didn't cover it, email [email protected] with a photo or short video of what's happening. We've seen most things.