Engineering

EMI Shielding

Prevent electronic eavesdropping and secure your command networks with heavily shielded tactical enclosures.

Tent interior showing reflective electromagnetic shielding layers and secure cable transit

How we approach EMI Shielding

Modern warfare involves constant electronic surveillance. Command posts must be invisible in the RF spectrum and impervious to signals intelligence (SIGINT). We integrate advanced electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding directly into the liner layers of our tactical tents.

Our shielding relies on highly conductive woven fabrics - typically blending silver, copper, and nickel - that act as a continuous Faraday cage. We engineer impenetrable RF seals around all doorways, utilizing conductive hook-and-loop closures and magnetic interlocks to prevent signal leakage.

Cabling entering the tent must not act as an antenna. We design specialized waveguide transits and power filtration panels built into the tent wall, ensuring secure data and clean power can enter without compromising the isolation.

These shielded environments are rigorously tested to meet stringent military standards for attenuation (e.g., MIL-STD-285 / IEEE 299), providing SCIF-level (Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility) security in an expeditionary package.

Invisible to the Spectrum

If your command post is broadcasting RF, it is already a target. We keep your emissions entirely contained.

  • Conductive Faraday cage liners.
  • High-attenuation RF door seals.
  • Filtered power and data transit panels.
  • SCIF-compliant deployable security.

The Seam Problem

A Faraday cage is only as strong as its weakest seam. Every stitch in our shielding liner is reinforced with conductive tape, ensuring there are no microscopic gaps for gigahertz frequencies to seep through.

EMI Shielding FAQ

Questions on tactical RF security.

Security Engineering

  1. Mesh Sourcing

    Select conductive textiles for target frequencies.

  2. Seal Design

    Engineered conductive door and window closures.

  3. RF Sweeping

    Certify attenuation with field spectrum analyzers.

Talk with engineers who own the work

Request a technical pass on EMI Shielding: constraints, risks, and a practical next step with clear assumptions.

Contact Niyotek