When triggered by the alarm workflow, the system releases dense fog within seconds, visibility drops to near zero, and intruders lose the ability to navigate or locate valuables.
Your Security Questions Answered
Phantom Fog focuses on practical answers about security fog systems and their application in protecting spaces across North America. This section addresses common questions so teams can understand both the operating logic and the deployment fit.
Because it removes visibility. Without sight, intruders lose control of the environment and typically exit immediately rather than continue the event blindly.
No. They detect and record events, but they do not physically prevent theft. By the time someone responds, the loss may already have happened.
That is the window where entry is made and valuables are targeted. If nothing interrupts the intruder immediately, the theft is far more likely to succeed.
Usually after the incident, when footage is reviewed, damage is assessed, and the loss is already real.
The CPM fog is designed to be non-toxic, non-corrosive, safe around people, animals, and electronics, and residue-free when used correctly.
Any business with valuable inventory or a high theft profile, including retail, cannabis, jewellery, warehousing, and temporary high-risk environments.
Yes. Cameras and alarms detect. Fog changes the environment in real time, which is what forces the incident to collapse instead of simply being documented.
The cost depends on site size, deployment type, and risk level. Hardware, installation, integration, and cartridge planning all affect the final number, so the right starting point is a proper assessment.