ON-THE-ROAD RADAR DETECTOR SITUATIONS
Valentine One gives you far more information about radar than
any radar detector. Still, to achieve the best defense,
you must interpret this information correctly. The
following examples will help you get maximum protection.
Situation 1:
You are driving toward a radar aimed at you.
Your
Warning: The Ahead arrow will glow. The
Bogey Counter will show 1. You’ll hear a slow Beep
for X band or Brap for other radars. As you come
close to the radar, the Beeps (or Braps) will become
more frequent until they merge into a continuous
tone. By this time you should see the radar.
The Beside arrow and then the Behind
arrow will glow as you pass the radar.
In this situation, moving radar
and stationary radar will give the same alert, except
the Beep rate will increase faster with moving radar
because the closing speed is greater.
Situation
2: You’re driving on a hilly road.
Radar is waiting over the next hill.
Your Warning: Well
before you reach the hilltop, the Ahead arrow will
glow. The Bogey Counter will show 1. You’ll hear
a slow Beep or Brap, and the rate will increase
very quickly as you near the hilltop. As soon as
you can see over the hill, you will probably spot
the radar.
Situation
3: You’re driving on a curvy road.
Radar is waiting around the next curve.
Your Warning: The
Ahead arrow will glow (because the radar is forward,
not to the side, of your car). The Bogey Counter
will show 1. You’ll hear a slow Beep or Brap, and
the rate will increase very quickly as you turn
the corner. You should see the radar as soon as
you’re around the corner.
Situation
4: You’re driving down the highway
and moving radar is coming up
behind you.
Your Warning: The
Behind arrow will glow. The Bogey Counter will show
1. You’ll hear a slow Beep or Brap, and the rate
will increase very slowly. This sort of alert could
last for miles because the closing rate is just
a few mph.
Finally, if you watch your mirrors, you’ll see the
radar. To mute the audio at any time, press the
Control Knob.
Situation
5: You’re driving down the highway
and closing on a moving radar ahead of you that’s
going in your direction.
Your Warning: The
Ahead arrow will glow. The Bogey Counter will show
1. You’ll hear a slow Beep or Brap that increases
very slowly. As in Situation 4, your closing rate
is very slow, so this alert could last for a long
time.
Whenever you encounter an alert
that lasts for an abnormally long time, it’s probably
radar moving along at about your speed. To mute
the audio at any time, press the Control Knob.
Situation
6: You’re driving a route where you
expect a burglar alarm, but this time there’s radar
hiding under the cover of the normal alert.
Your Warning: The
Ahead arrow will glow. You’ll hear the usual Beep
or Brap if you detect the burglar alarm, possibly
(but not necessarily) a different sound if the radar
is detected first. But when you hear the Bogey Lock
(“Dee-Deet”) warning, that’s a sure indication that
this situation is more threatening. The Bogey Lock
warning is given whenever Valentine One locks onto
an additional threat. In this case, the Bogey Counter
will show 2, confirming the second threat. If the
radar is X band, same as the burglar alarm, you
will hear a slow Beep; it may strengthen faster
than normal. If the radar is on one of the other
frequencies, the audio will correspond to the bogey
that the computer has determined to be most dangerous.
The key thing to remember is, any
time you detect more bogeys than normal, watch out.
Situation
7: You’re driving through a metro
area with the usual number of burglar alarms and
microwave door openers.
Your Warning: Because
these signals are usually weak, you'll get slow
Beep or Brap (if you hear Bra-Brap, the warning
for Ka band, it's probably radar). The Ahead arrow
will quickly pass to the side. Or your first alert
may be to the side. These alarms are usually located
well off the road.
You may also encounter overlapping
alarms. During an alert, you’ll hear Bogey (“Dee-Deet”)
Lock each time an additional bogey is detected.
The Bogey Counter shows the total, which, in the
case of overlapping alarms, will be 2 or more. If
they are in different directions, more than one
direction arrow will glow. When multiple directions
are being monitored, the computer will decide which
is most dangerous and that one will be indicated
by a flashing arrow. The audio warning will correspond
to that bogey.
The key thing to remember about
non-radar alarms on X band is this: they’re weak
and they pass to the side quickly. If you find a
strong one Ahead, it’s probably radar. You can minimize
the annoyance of these X-band alarms by selecting
Logic® or Advanced-Logic® modes. See
Controls & Functions (pages 15 and 16).
Situation
8: You’re driving down the highway
and Instant-on radar is operating nearby.
Your Warning: The
first thing you’ll notice will be “Beeeee”, or “Braaaaa”
because the radar encounter will start instantly
at high strength. If the radar is ahead, then the
Ahead arrow will glow. Probably the radar is aimed
in your direction, but maybe not. It might be aimed
the same way you’re going, zapping oncoming cars
as they approach and ready to shoot you in the back
after you’ve passed. In either case, watch out.
If the Behind arrow glows simultaneously
with the “Beeeee” or “Braaaaa”, probably you are
being shot in the back.
Situation
9: You’re driving down a highway and
Instant-on radar — a long way ahead — is zapping
traffic as it passes.
Your Warning: The
Ahead arrow will glow. The Bogey Counter will show
1. You’ll hear a very slow Beep or Brap that will
last just 3-5 seconds. Then the alerts ends.
What happens next depends on traffic
and terrain. If there’s light or medium traffic
between you and the radar, you’ll hear the same
pattern again, maybe repeated several times, as
the radar zaps each car ahead in turn. If you hear
this pattern, watch out.
If there’s no traffic within sight
ahead, watch out, because you could be next.
With ordinary detectors, short,
weak alerts are usually shrugged off as false alarms,
leading the motorist to drive right into an Instant-on
trap. The Radar Locator is critical to your defense
in this circumstance. If it points off to the side,
the bogey is not a threat. But if it points ahead,
watch out.

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