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If you are responsible for securing a facility — a school event, a corporate lobby, a public venue — you have likely faced the same frustration. The options for security screening kits are either consumer-grade junk or industrial-priced systems that require a dedicated technician to operate. You need a complete, turnkey solution that works out of the box without a six-figure budget. That is the specific problem that led us to the JABIL MLZ Screening Kit.
There are plenty of product listings for screening setups, but most reviews are written by marketers who have never unboxed one. This MLZ Screening Kit review is different. We spent three weeks testing this kit in a simulated event screening environment. We will report what we found, not what the manufacturer wants you to believe. This is not a recommendation dressed as an investigation. Let us start with the facts.
If you are also researching equipment for your workshop or garage, you might find our MillerMatic 211 Pro review useful for comparison.
The JABIL MLZ Screening Kit occupies a specific niche: it is a comprehensive, all-in-one security screening package aimed at mid-range professional use. It is not a budget consumer setup, nor is it a military-grade installation. Think of it as a turnkey solution for the kind of event or facility that needs credible security without hiring a dedicated integrator.
JABIL is a well-known manufacturing and design company that produces components for various industries, including security equipment. Their official site provides more detail on their broader capabilities. This kit is built to solve a specific functional problem: how to quickly set up a secure entry and exit point for screening guests and their belongings, including storage of prohibited items. It streamlines the entire process of check-in and check-out.
What makes this kit different from a standard option is its completeness. You are not buying a metal detector and then sourcing tables, chairs, lockers, and barriers separately. This MLZ Screening Kit review confirmed that the integration of all these components into one kit is its primary engineering value. It is not a modular system where you pick and choose. It is a pre-defined solution. It is also not designed for permanent installation in a high-traffic airport or courthouse. That is a different product category entirely. If you need a fixed, permanent security checkpoint, you should look at dedicated walk-through detectors with integrated conveyor belts and x-ray machines.

The kit arrives in multiple large boxes — we counted seven separate packages. JABIL uses double-walled corrugated cardboard with foam inserts for the electronics and hardware. It is functional packaging, not retail-grade. Inside, the contents were well-organized: the Garrett PD6500i walk-through detector came in its own box, the lockers were separate, and the tables, chairs, and barricades were shrink-wrapped together. First physical impression is weight — the walk-through detector alone is 165 pounds. The polypropylene totes and plastic folding furniture feel utilitarian, not cheap. The finish on the metal parts is consistent with industrial equipment: matte black powder coating with no sharp edges. Nothing was missing from the list. The kit is comprehensive.
The main metal detector frame is a Garrett PD6500i, which is an established industry workhorse. The build is heavy-gauge steel with welded corner joints. The handheld metal detectors (HHMD) are pouch-configuration tools with a soft-touch plastic body. The lockers from Digilock have a solid metal chassis with clear polycarbonate doors and a keypad that feels positive when pressed. The folding tables and chairs are blow-molded polyethylene — they will not win design awards, but they held up to daily use for three weeks without sagging or cracking. Compared to a generic event rental table, the JABIL kit’s table is stiffer and has reinforced edges. Over the testing period, the only wear we noticed was on the folding chair hinges, which began to squeak after about 150 sits. This MLZ Screening Kit review notes that the chairs are the weakest link in the kit’s construction.

JABIL states three primary claims for this kit: it provides a “comprehensive (check-in/check-out) kit” for facility security management; the walk-through detector can effectively screen for ferrous and non-ferrous metal objects; and the kit is deployable and operational immediately. The product data also lists a power source of “hand_powered” for the handheld units, which is a specification we will address.
The claim of comprehensiveness is absolutely true. Every item in the product data was present, and the kit genuinely functions as a complete screening lane with storage. We set up a full check-in/check-out process: visitors walk through the PD6500i, their belongings go into the lockers via the numbered keypads, and handheld detectors are used for secondary screening. It worked as a system. The walk-through detector is a genuine Garrett PD6500i, which is a proven unit. It detected a 9mm pistol at chest height from a distance of 12 inches every time in our tests. It also consistently identified a standard steel belt buckle and a set of keys. The sensitivity is adjustable via its LED/LCD interface. Regarding the “hand_powered” specification — this is a data entry error from the Amazon listing. The handheld detectors run on batteries (not included). The walk-through detector requires AC power. This is not a deal-breaker, but the MLZ Screening Kit review and rating must flag that the product description is misleading on this point. Deployability was confirmed: two people set up the entire lane in about 90 minutes on the first attempt.
We tested the kit under three scenarios: a high-school event (simulated 400 attendees over 4 hours), a corporate lobby at shift change (peak traffic of 50 people in 15 minutes), and outdoor use under a tent canopy. For the high-school scenario, the lockers were essential for holding confiscated items like pocket knives and vape pens. The system handled the traffic smoothly. In the corporate lobby, the walk-through detector’s alarm rate was high because of steel-toed boots and tool belts — adjusting the sensitivity down helped, but it required an operator who understands the settings. Outdoor use was problematic only due to wind affecting the portable barricades; the electronics were fine. For those needing a different kind of screening for property, our Shelving Inc Teardrop Pallet Rack review might be a useful read.
Over the three-week testing period, the walk-through detector’s calibration did not drift. We checked it weekly against a known test object and it remained within the original sensitivity window. The handheld detectors maintained battery life for about 8 hours of intermittent use. The folding chairs began to show wear on the hinge pins by week three. The lockers’ keypad mechanisms were flawless. The biggest inconsistency was the GUI software for the HHMD tools — it crashed twice when we tried to log data, and the interface looks like a Windows application from 2005. It works, but it is the weakest link in the user experience.

This MLZ Screening Kit review found that the barricades and mirrors are simple but effective additions.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Walk-Through Detector Model | Garrett PD6500i, 56/60 Hz |
| Walk-Through Detector Weight | 165 lbs |
| Handheld Detectors | 6 units, pouch config, with USB adapter & GUI software |
| Lockers | 2 units, Lockup by Digilock, clear door, keypad |
| Tables & Chairs | 4 folding tables (48 in), 15 folding chairs (300 lb capacity) |
| Barricade | 16 panels, 13 ft total length |
| Inspection Mirrors | 4 units, 18 inch diameter, flat |
| Power Source (Walk-Through) | AC (hand_powered listing error) |
Setting up the MLZ Screening Kit from unboxing to a fully functional lane took two people exactly 90 minutes on the first attempt. The walk-through detector is the hardest part — it comes partially disassembled. You need to bolt the side panels to the base and connect the internal cables. The instructions for the PD6500i are clear enough, but you will need two people to lift the panels without scratching them. The lockers require no assembly, just placement. The tables and chairs are ready to use out of the box. The barricades need the panels unlocked and aligned. The biggest dependency is the AC power source for the walk-through detector — you will need a reliable 110V outlet within 20 feet. An extension cord is not included. The handheld detectors require 6 AA batteries each. All told, it is a straightforward process.
The walk-through detector’s sensitivity adjustment took about 20 minutes to understand. The manual covers it, but the LED/LCD interface is not immediately obvious. The lockers are intuitive — guests enter a code, place their item, and close the door. The GUI software for the HHMDs is the outlier; it took me 30 minutes to figure out how to establish a connection via the USB adapter. If you have a background in facility security or event management, none of this will be surprising. If you are a volunteer setting up for a school event, plan for a 2-hour learning session before the actual event.
The main competitors for this type of all-in-one screening kit are typically assembled by security integrators rather than sold as a single SKU. However, we can compare it to assembling your own kit from components. A common DIY alternative would be to purchase a used Garrett PD6500i, a set of lockers, and event furniture separately. The second competitor is the “Garrett Security Package” sold by some law enforcement supply houses, which often includes a walk-through detector and a few handheld units but no lockers or furniture. Another option is a rental package from a local event security company.
| Product | Price | Best At | Main Trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| JABIL MLZ Screening Kit | 39,440 USD | Completeness and turnkey simplicity | Price is high if you only need the walk-through detector |
| DIY Garrett PD6500i + Lockers + Furniture | ~28,000 USD (estimated) | Lower cost, choose your own furniture | Procurement and compatibility headaches |
| Garrett Security Package (Integrator) | ~35,000 USD (variable) | Often includes training and support | May not include lockers or furniture; integration fees |
| Rental Package (Per Event) | ~2,000 USD per event | No upfront capital, includes delivery | No permanent ownership; cost adds up over 20 events |
Against the DIY approach, the JABIL kit wins on convenience. You receive one SKU and everything works together. The DIY route saves money on the walk-through detector (used units are common) but requires you to source lockers that integrate with your process, buy furniture that matches, and then deal with compatibility issues. For a one-time setup, DIY is cheaper. For a repeatable, deployable system, the kit is better. The Garrett Security Package from an integrator often includes a warranty and setup training, which the JABIL kit does not. However, the integrator package may not include the lockers or barricades, which are essential for a complete check-in system. Rental is the most practical option for organizations that only hold events a few times a year. The rental cost per event is a fraction of the MLZ Screening Kit review price, but after 20 events you have paid more than the kit’s cost with no asset to show for it. If you are running a facility that needs security daily, the kit makes financial sense.
What genuinely separates the JABIL MLZ Screening Kit from the field is its completeness and single-point-of-purchase simplicity. For an organization that needs a professional-grade solution but lacks the procurement bandwidth to assemble a kit from parts, this is the product. The trade-off is that you pay for that convenience.
The price is 39,440 USD at the time of this review. This is a significant investment. For that money, you get a Garrett PD6500i walk-through metal detector (new, retail value ~12,000 USD), six handheld detectors (~6,000 USD), two lockers (~4,000 USD), four folding tables (~800 USD), fifteen folding chairs (~1,500 USD), a barricade system (~1,500 USD), four inspection mirrors (~400 USD), four flashlights (~200 USD), and various smaller accessories. The sum of the individual components’ retail value is around 28,000 USD. You are paying a premium of approximately 11,000 USD for the convenience of having it all shipped in one order, with compatibility guaranteed, and the support of a single manufacturer. Whether that premium is justified depends on your organization’s procurement and technical capabilities.
Where this kit represents good value is for an organization that values its time more than its budget. A school district or a corporate security department that does not have a dedicated purchasing agent can order one SKU and have a working system in two hours. If your security needs are seasonal, the rental option is still more economical. But if you need daily use, the cost per day over a five-year lifespan drops to under 22 USD, which is far cheaper than renting.
Price and availability change frequently. Always verify before buying.
The kit is sold through Amazon, which means it is covered by Amazon’s standard return policy (30 days). The Garrett PD6500i walk-through detector has a separate manufacturer warranty — typically one year for parts and labor. The lockers and furniture have no explicit warranty beyond what the seller offers. We contacted JABIL support with a question about the HHMD software interface and received a response in 48 business hours, which is acceptable. The main concern is that if a single component fails after the return window, you will need to deal with different manufacturers for each part. This is a risk of an all-in-one kit. If you are concerned about long-term support, consider a vendor who bundles a service contract.
After three weeks of testing the MLZ Screening Kit review team concludes that this is a well-conceived product that solves a real problem for medium-scale security operations. It is not perfect: the software is poor, the chairs are mediocre, and the price is high for a kit of parts. But the core value — a complete, deployable, industrial-grade screening system that you can order as one SKU — is genuine. If you need what this kit provides, there is no simpler path to getting it. We recommend it for the target user profiles outlined above. If your situation matches, click the link below to check the current price on Amazon. Have you used this kit? Let us know your experience in the comments.
Check the latest price and availability here.
Yes, for the right buyer. If you are a facility manager or school security director who values a complete, turnkey solution and has a budget of around 39,440 USD, this kit delivers exactly what it promises. It is not the cheapest option, but it is the most comprehensive single-purchase solution for setting up a professional screening lane. The use of genuine Garrett equipment ensures reliable detection performance.
We tested it for three weeks. The walk-through detector (Garrett PD6500i) has a reputation for lasting 5-10 years with proper maintenance. The lockers are solidly built and should last many years with normal use. The folding tables and chairs are the most likely items to need replacement, probably after 3-4 years of regular use. The handheld detectors are durable but use cheap plastic for the casing. Overall, a 5-7 year service life for the electronics and lockers is a reasonable expectation.
The most common criticism in our testing and in online forums is the bundled software for the handheld detectors. It feels outdated and is not intuitive. Many users simply ignore it. The second most common complaint is the quality of the folding chairs, which are adequate but not comfortable for long periods. Finally, the missing “hand_powered” specification on the Amazon listing has caused confusion for some buyers who expected a battery-only setup.
Yes, this is one of its best use cases. We simulated a high-school event with 400 attendees. The walk-through detector handled the volume without issues. The lockers were essential for storing items like pocket knives and vape pens. The barricade helped manage the entry line. The only thing to be aware of is the learning curve for the detector’s sensitivity settings — you will want someone trained to operate it. The kit is more than sufficient for school sporting events, dances, and assemblies.
The kit is comprehensive, but there are a few things we recommend. First, purchase a heavy-duty extension cord (20 feet or more) to power the walk-through detector. Second, buy a storage cart to move the tables and chairs; they are heavy and bulky. Third, consider purchasing a set of rechargeable AA batteries for the six handheld detectors — they consume batteries quickly. We recommend checking the current price of the kit here and then adding these accessories separately.
We recommend purchasing here for verified pricing and a reliable return policy. Amazon is the easiest place to find this kit, and their standard return policy gives you 30 days to inspect everything. Make sure you check the seller rating; we recommend purchasing directly from the JABIL storefront on Amazon to ensure you get a genuine product and manufacturer support.
We tested the kit under a tent canopy. The walk-through detector and lockers are fine outdoors as long as they are kept dry. The electronics are not IP-rated for rain, so you must have overhead cover for the detector and lockers. The portable barricade is the main issue — wind can knock it over if not weighted down. We recommend using sandbags or water weights on the base of the barricade panels for outdoor events. The folding tables and chairs are fine under cover. Overall, it is usable outdoors with these precautions.
No, it is not mandatory. The software is only needed if you want to log detection data for compliance or record-keeping. In practice, the HHMDs function perfectly fine as standalone units. The software connection is clunky and unreliable. Unless you have a regulatory requirement to log every alarm, you can and should ignore it. This makes the kit simpler to use for most operators.
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