FLASHPRO Solid-State Destroyer
and Flash Media Shredder
A high-volume shredder specifically designed for an office environment
The FLASHPRO Solid-State Destroyer shreds a wide variety of media including smartphones, mini-tablets (up to 170 mm in width), USB sticks, solid-state drives (SSD), and optical media.
Add Garner’s exclusive IRONCLAD Destruction Verification System to the FLASHPRO Solid-State Destroyer to capture images of the media prior to shredding and generate destruction reports for audit or archival purposes.
Garner FLASHPRO features:
Fast and powerful
Shred media to 0.16 x 0.6in./4x15mm pieces
Destroy smartphones, tablets, USB drives, etc.
SmartCut adjusts to match media size
High volume, up to 500 items per hour
SmartControl automatable operation
Audit-worthy reporting
Built-in diagnostics for guaranteed erasure
LCD screen shows gauss level per cycle
Add SCAN-1XE for destruction reports
Upgrade to IRONCLAD for image capture
Complete auditable verification solution
Best-in-class hardware
CE certified, tested to high safety standards
Ideal for an office environment
Economical and quiet design
Plugs into a standard wall outlet
Durable enough for tough environments
View our Garner FLASHPRO product brochure
Find technical specifications and more inside our handy product brochures, in PDF format.
Enhanced with IRONCLAD
Destroying data is all well and good, but can you prove it?
Garner is the only brand of degaussers and destroyers with IRONCLAD, an erasure and destruction verification system that automatically captures a JPEG image of the hard drive immediately after it is degaussed and generates a proof-of-destruction certificate for audit and archival purposes.
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Is Deleting Files Enough Before Disposing of a Computer?
Deleting files before disposing of a computer is not enough for most businesses. When a file is deleted, the computer usually removes the visible reference to that file rather than immediately removing every trace of…
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What Is the Best Way to Destroy Data on Flash-Based Storage?
Supporting Questions: The best way to destroy data on flash-based storage is to use a destruction method designed for the specific type of device and the level of data risk involved. For end-of-life business assets,…
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Can Physically Damaged Hard Drives Still Contain Recoverable Data?
Supporting Questions: Yes, physically damaged hard drives can still contain recoverable data. A drive that looks broken, dented, cracked or non-functional may still hold information on its internal platters. Unless the data-bearing components have been…