[Shotimes] Radar/Laser Detectors
Ron Porter
ronporter@prodigy.net
Sun, 12 Jan 2003 15:45:23 -0500
Ahhhhhh, Don, this is why I call you and others "Val-1 Groupies"!! ;-)
Someone comes up with a simple statement of their true observation, and we
get a full marketing pitch!!
Keep in mind, this is your opinion. Kirk stated a very simple observation
based on a real incident. IMHO, you have been sucked in by the Mike
Valentine marketing machine. I respect what you believe. What I have a
problem with, from you and other Val-1 groupies, is that the Val-1 is the
only way to save your ass from radar. This is false. Val-1s do well in
tests.....tests are not true driving situations.
Also, you must keep in mind that you are a rather conservative driver.
Frankly, I don't even know why you need a radar detector, as you don't
regularly drive more than 10 over the limit, from what I recall. As I have
told people in the past.....if you don't drive more than 10 over the limit,
don't waste your money on a radar detector.
I generally drive in the 79-in-a 70-limit zone, but there are many times
when I will do 90-100 in 65-70 zones when I need to get somewhere. I
absolutely trust my Escort detectors to save my ass.....and they HAVE saved
my ass for the last 20 years. With this record, spending the extra $$$ on a
Val-1 with those goofy arrows flashing at me could not have done any better.
Folks looking at buying radar detectors need to see the various opinions.
Anyone can talk all they want about test results and marketing BS, but
putting your license in the hands of an electronic device is the true test
of faith, and my Escorts have not let me down......one qualification, my
Passport let me down almost 10 years ago when I got nailed by a new
technology (a Stalker gun on Ka) that it couldn't detect....but Ka detectors
were then just hitting the market, led by Escort.
Anyone should buy what they want. If someone feels a Val-1 gives them more
protection, go for it. Just be aware that the Val-1 is not the
be-all-and-end-all in radar and laser protection. Those of us who have been
flagrant speed limit violators for MANY years do think otherwise.
Ron Porter
-----Original Message-----
From: shotimes-admin@autox.team.net
[mailto:shotimes-admin@autox.team.net]On Behalf Of Donald Mallinson
Sent: Sunday, January 12, 2003 10:09 AM
To: Kirk.doucette@verizon.net
Cc: shotimes-admin@autox.team.net; shotimes@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: [Shotimes] Radar/Laser Detectors
Sure, but the answer is longer than you might want, but you
should understand why I like my V1 as much as I do.
Were the two units you mention in the exact same vehicle at
the exact same time? NO. Unless you are running the two
units under the exact same situation, and both units are new
or in the same condition, you can't really compare. How was
each mounted? A lot of factors enter into the performance
equation.
I have run my Val 1 with other's Passports or other units,
including, at the time, a brand new BEL top of the line
unit. Same car, same location (within a couple inches,
lined up together), and the Val 1 beat the Other units every
time. K-40 is a good unit, and properly mounted it doesn't
have to go through the glass, and that does make a
difference. But where each car was located on the road
makes a bigger difference. I have seen radar bounce off a
sign, a bridge or anything else metal and kick off a
detector when others in the same general area were dark.
One example does not proof make....I go with virtually EVERY
radar detector test in the past decade, showing that the V1
is as good if not much better than anything available. Mike
Valentine is just good, that is why he has built the two
most respected units anywhere, the original Escort and now
the V1. Both were solid units that performed WAY above the
norm back then and now.
As for size, The V1 is a tiny bit bigger, but it is WAY
easier to use, no need for all those "Programs" when the
thing works the way it is supposed too. One knob, one
concentric knob. And all those others have an owners
manual you have to memorize to use correctly. My V1 was up
and "memorized" within 5 minutes. Also, I have NEVER had a
Valentine detector come apart on me. Solid as a rock, and
only an ounce heavier, and that tiny bit of size/weight is
of ZERO concern to me. My unit fits above the inside rear
view mirror where it is not a glaring sign to police or
thieves, and although the dark band on the glass cuts down
laser detection, that isn't of concern. More than instant
on radar, laser is a true "you been had" problem, but even
now, they aren't in use in most areas of the country, and
almost not at all in my part.
There are other factors. Sure instant on is a problem, but
a good detector will pick it up if a car in front of, or
behind you is painted. And with the Val 1 I know which it
is, with any other detector you have no clue. (exception is
the K-40 dual unit, again, a good unit) I get warnings
sometimes a mile or more away. Running alone at night on a
deserted highway is when I usually go my slowest!
Also, my Val 1 has a tone that lets me know, better than any
other detector I have tried or experienced, how FAR Away THE
THREAT IS. Not with the little lights, but with the tone.
No other detector I have tried has such a range of tone that
gives a good indication of how far away the threat is.
Most others have to be practically nose to nose with the
threat before they go full alert. My Valentine will go on
full point as soon as the threat is line of sight. How
valuable is that?
I don't use my detector as much to get out of tickets as to
know what is going on around me. I want to know BEFORE I
crest that hill if there is a trap on the other side before
the jerk in front of me slams on his brakes. At least with
the detector I can know when some of this is going to happen.
I don't "depend" on the Val 1, I use it as part of my
on-highway tools. along with the CB (still valuable if you
know how to talk to the truckers, and I have been doing so
for 30+ years), and the scanner, when I drive the '89.
Eyes and common sense are the biggest part of the package.
I mention all this about the V1 because it is simply the
best unit I have ever seen or tried. The cost factor is NOT
a factor, I have had $50 specials and just like the $200+
regular detectors that is all they are, a "detector". No
value to me at all. I want to know what direction the
threat is coming from. I learned that was valuable with my
original Valentine Escort. It had a superior quality needle
meter (can't sell those now, kids want those flashy lights,
but a meter is still WAY better when you want to evaluate a
signal) that would let me tell if a threat was in front,
behind or from the side... and I could tell from WHAT side!
Can't even do that with the new V1. How?
By watching the needle when it was in alert mode. Needle
drops as you approach and go under a bridge? Threat ahead.
Needle gains as you approach a bridge? Threat behind.
Needle gains as you go by a big metal sign on the left?
Threat to the right etc. Understanding how radio waves work
and bounce, I could with almost 100% accuracy determine
where the threat was coming from, and even with some
accuracy, how far away. Wish the new V1 had a meter!
Oh, and My original V1 was updated for about 2/3 the cost of
a new one a couple of years ago by the factory. I could
care less about how "snazzy" a detector looks. Most "new"
units by BEL and Passport are less about performance than
looks. When a unit truly peforms, and provides VALUE, it
doesn't have to be trendy. The V1 continues to be a best
seller, though it is virtually identical to the very first
one sold many years ago. Updates have been to performance,
never to style. Build quality, performance, ease of use,
and features that pay off. That is value.
So that is my Detector bible.
Don Mallinson
Kirk Doucette wrote:
> Mr .M could you explain to me why my K40 picked up some radar during the
01
> Convention but the Val 1 did not? Its kind of moot since it was too late
but
> the guy with the Val 1 got a ticket and the other guy did not with the
K40.
>
>
> Kirk J Doucette
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