06-12-2007, 04:06 PM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Texas
Posts: 1,311
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So what's the price of one of these V1? I have the Belltronics and am very happy. I heard the V1 was very expensive.
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06-12-2007, 04:48 PM
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#2
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Huntington, NY
Posts: 409
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by porsche986spyder
So what's the price of one of these V1? I have the Belltronics and am very happy. I heard the V1 was very expensive. 
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A ticket is expensive too and the attendant insurance cost increases. The V1 is $400 which is actually cheap for the protection and quality. Lesser detectors at maybe $200 or $300 are expensive if you get tickets using them. So just look at the the difference in price. You are paying an extra $100 to not get tickets and get the great feature.
__________________
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2000 Boxster S: 18" Turbo wheels w/color crests, Litronics, Onboard Computer, Traction control, Cruise, Painted rollbar, Leather interior, Aluminum package, headlight washers, Porsche GT3 seats, windstop, Hi Fi six speaker amp package, DSP, CDR 220, Limited Slip, side airbags, BK Rollbar extender.
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06-13-2007, 08:15 AM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 33
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All this talk about radar detectors makes me envious. Illegal here in Ontario.
The only radar detector allowed here is an alert passenger with binoculars!
__________________
2007 Boxster S 6 spd manual,GuardsRed/BlackTop/Sand Full Leather,Sport Design Pkg.,19" Carrera Rims w/color crest,Sport Chrono,Adaptive Sport Seats, WindStop, Smooth Leather Steering Wheel/Center, Aluminum Painted Roll Bar, Porsche Crest in Headrest,Factory Sand Mats
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06-13-2007, 08:34 AM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 7,243
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The debate over whether the arrows and bogey counter are really worth the extra hundred bucks will rage on for anyone who has never used both the V1 and all the others. If you used a V1 in a LEO and Walmart infested area, you'd quickly stop all the debate.
The Beltronics or the Escort will certainly keep you out of trouble with Johnny law, and if you currently own one enjoy the protection it affords you. Just know that I've tried both and sensitivity aside, these other detectors will not tell you if the LEO has passed you or not, going the other way, and you may not know if more LEOs are on the prowl.
Moreover, these other detectors are not upgradeable and not programmable.
So, buy purchasing a V1, you get these unique features:
• Arrows which tell you where the threat is coming from which gives you the ability to look in one direction for the threat, not three or four and keep wondering where he's sitting or driving. No one really understands how wonderful this is until he or she actually use the V1.
• A bogey counter which indicates more than one threat, which also gives you the ability to keep your speed low until you're past all the threats. No one really understands how wonderful this feature is either until he or she uses the V1.
• A programmable detector. Because X band is only used in one or two states now due to it's old technology and age, I programmed my V1 to simply ignore any X band readings. This knocked out a vast majority of the false alarms coming from WarMarts and Kmarts, etc. Other detectors cannot block bands or change sensitivity thresholds like the V1.
• An upgradeable detector. Three years ago, my wife asked me to come into the breakfast room and sort through a junk drawer. In the drawer I had stored 3 radar detectors from the past 20 years of marriage. I bought them new and used, all of which were abandoned for a newer model that was more sensitive, filtered out more false readings, or had more options (Ka, Laser, a rear-facing sensor, etc.). The V1 can be programmed for a small fee for new threats and will probably be the last dash-mounted detector I need to buy. This is a huge benefit to me personally.
My conclusion and recommendation:
If you're reading this and you own a Bel or Escort and want to argue more, resist the urge and just buy a V1 and try it for a month, risk free. If you don't think the arrows, the bogey counter, the ability to turn off X band and upgrade it is worth it, return the detector and get all your money back.
I seriously doubt you'll return it though. I've never encountered a V1 owner who was not so impressed with it that he or she said they'd rather buy a different detector next time. Period.
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06-13-2007, 10:01 AM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 530
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by RandallNeighbour
The Beltronics or the Escort will certainly keep you out of trouble with Johnny law, and if you currently own one enjoy the protection it affords you. Just know that I've tried both and sensitivity aside, these other detectors will not tell you if the LEO has passed you or not, going the other way, and you may not know if more LEOs are on the prowl.
Moreover, these other detectors are not upgradeable and not programmable.
Not true. The 8500 is programmable.
So, buy purchasing a V1, you get these unique features:
Not so unique...
• Arrows
I just slow down until the threat is gone.
• A bogey counter which indicates more than one threat,
In Expert mode, the 8500 can track and display up to 8 signals at one time.
• A programmable detector. Because X band is only used in one or two states now due to it's old technology and age, I programmed my V1 to simply ignore any X band readings. Other detectors cannot block bands or change sensitivity thresholds like the V1.
Untrue. The 8500 is programmable, allowing you to turn off individual bands and change sensitivity, among other things.
• An upgradeable detector.
Looks like V1 would get it right the first time.
My conclusion and recommendation:
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Buy an 8500. It doesn't have the "cool" arrows, but it is programmable, can track multiple bogeys (if that's really necessary), and has better KA sensitivity, in my own experience. My 8500 alerted me to a KA threat about 6 seconds before my friend's V1 alerted him. We were traveling side-by-side on a four-lane, and he wondered why I hit the brakes. A little while later his V1 got around to telling him why, complete with a nice arrow pointed forward!
I'll take my 8500.
__________________
Jack
2000 Boxster S - gone -
2006 Audi A6 Quattro 3.2
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06-14-2007, 02:37 AM
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#7
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Guest
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by JackG
Buy an 8500. It doesn't have the "cool" arrows, but it is programmable, can track multiple bogeys (if that's really necessary), and has better KA sensitivity, in my own experience. My 8500 alerted me to a KA threat about 6 seconds before my friend's V1 alerted him. We were traveling side-by-side on a four-lane, and he wondered why I hit the brakes. A little while later his V1 got around to telling him why, complete with a nice arrow pointed forward!
I'll take my 8500. 
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The arrows are very very functional. That's what makes them "cool". I'm a form follows function kind of guy. If you had one you'd know. I can't tell you why your 8500 had the 6 sec. heads up in your experience, there could be a plethora of explanations and not limited to, e.g., different program running on V1: L, vs l vs A, or different mounting position, different car therefore different diffraction profile, the radar gun was biased to your lane, V1 is broken, baby Jimbo stuck a piece of gum on the front antenna of V1, etc... I dunno.
I do know most scientific testing disagrees with you. The V1 virtually dominates all others, i.e.
Car and Driver,
http://www.caranddriver.com/features/1993/the-great-detector-test-page3.html
And my favorite,
http://www.guysoflidar.com/radar-detector-test-fall-2006/radar-detector-test.html
It can be argued there is a bias there, but that's a stretch. (Although I do believe there are a few dummy forums out there that I ran into, especially Craig Peterson smells fishy http://valentine1.com/lab/V1Hater.asp). I say that because I have read ALL the reviews word for word, and feel he has a clear bias which is unfounded. It's ok to have a bias, it's a free world for the most part. My thing is that I prefer a bias that's well founded. Hey that's why I drive a Boxster instead of a VW bug type I.
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06-14-2007, 11:00 AM
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 530
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boxsterz,
I've had some experience with a V1, and I just didn't find the arrows that useful. If there's an alert, I slow down. When it's gone, I resume. For me, the arrows are not a must-have, just "cool", and not worth an extra $100.
My post was merely an attempt to correct the mis-information that keeps flowing, and to relate a real-world experience I had. It's obvious that many people have become passionate about V1's. Whether it's because of a great product or great marketing doesn't matter. I think they are a good detector, but I'm not a V1 cheerleader. Others are, and that's OK.
As you point out, most of the "tests" and forums out there are biased in some way. You point out two tests that rated the V1 as better, but I'm sure you know that there have been tests that rated the 8500 as the winner as well. Also, even if one of those sensitivity tests were actually run properly so the results can really be compared evenly, that doesn't mean those lab results will translate to the real world. There are abundant examples of that.
In the end, you pay your money and you take your chances.
__________________
Jack
2000 Boxster S - gone -
2006 Audi A6 Quattro 3.2
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06-14-2007, 02:19 PM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Here
Posts: 6
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by boxsterz
It can be argued there is a bias there, but that's a stretch. (Although I do believe there are a few dummy forums out there that I ran into, especially Craig Peterson smells fishy http://valentine1.com/lab/V1Hater.asp). I say that because I have read ALL the reviews word for word, and feel he has a clear bias which is unfounded. It's ok to have a bias, it's a free world for the most part. My thing is that I prefer a bias that's well founded. Hey that's why I drive a Boxster instead of a VW bug type I. 
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Craig Peterson runs Radartest.com and he works for Bel and Escort so he bashes the Valentine One every chance he gets. He tried to sabotage the Guysoflidar radar/laser detector test because he knows they are completely unbiased and the Valentine One usually wins in their testing.
Read about this loser here:
http://www.guysoflidar.com/march-2007/sabotage.html
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