mjhpadi
New Member
I do know they are illegal in Virginia, but not here in Pennsylvania.
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Im going to have to side with the v1 over the ******. Once you have the arrows you cannot live without them. Gps, or other useless functions does not make up for the lack of it.
http://www.radartest.com/article_2.asp?articleid=100578
"The Valentine does have the advantage of having dual antennas, allowing its directional arrows identify the direction that the radar is coming from. However, Radar Roy and other reviewers have all agreed, that the filtering on the Valentine 1 is inferior. So much so that in the November 2004 issue of Autoweek magazine's review, they called the Valentine 1 the "Chicken Little of radar detectors".
"****** and Beltronics have a single antenna that is bi-directional. This allows you to receive radar from front and rear, at distances equal to or exceeding that of Valentine. ****** and Bel also have the best filtering on the market today."


...when it gets slow at night the threshold drops from 15 over to 10 over for stops....

http://www.radartest.com/article_2.asp?articleid=100578
"The Valentine does have the advantage of having dual antennas, allowing its directional arrows identify the direction that the radar is coming from. However, Radar Roy and other reviewers have all agreed, that the filtering on the Valentine 1 is inferior. So much so that in the November 2004 issue of Autoweek magazine's review, they called the Valentine 1 the "Chicken Little of radar detectors".
"****** and Beltronics have a single antenna that is bi-directional. This allows you to receive radar from front and rear, at distances equal to or exceeding that of Valentine. ****** and Bel also have the best filtering on the market today."
I think that to really understand how radar detectors work you need to send some time in a cruiser using radar, most people don't have the slightest clue work it functions. the majority of cruisers have radar units front and back. the gun and mounted units generally don't have that much of a range, the max on the one's I've used is about 1000-1500ft (radar comes out as a cone and gets bigger and less accurate as it goes out) Cops don't press the button everytime they see a car, its pretty easy to tell if someone is hauling it and is worth checking. The biggest way to get around detectors is to sit at night (or during the day if you have a really good hiding place), a ways off the road, with the cruiser pointed with the flow of traffic with the lights off and tapping the mounted radar well after a car has pasted you, by then its way too late. And nothing gaurentees a speeding ticket more than detectors, no seatbelts or children in the car. The area I'm in during the night shift we can go 10-15mins without seeing a car (not touching the radar) so if your the first person through doing 20 over, you're screwed, not to mention that when it gets slow at night the threshold drops from 15 over to 10 over for stops....
figured I'd throw some cons in with all these pros![]()
You do realize that that site sells Bell and ****** detectors right?![]()
That is true, but can you post some evidence that shows their testing was falsified?
Sensitivity is only part of the issue. Filtering out false signals so you don't detect every supermarket you pass is a valuable feature. And what good is knowing which direction the radar is coming from anyhow? Also, having a detector that alerts to red light cameras and can mark known speed traps is a whole other layer of protection. Once you've used a detector that NEVER alerts without a real threat you can really appreciate the difference.