Niehart
Pie Smuggler
Damn you Wendy, you are costing me money I don't have.
Havingtried to keep up followed AuburnFJR a few times, I do think that is the best setup.
Having
Didn't you get a ticket on I-15 when you were coming into a town? LEO might have been masking his radar signature by hiding in a radar polluted zone, as is common when coming into a town, and he might not have been using Ka band. although Ka band pollution is also becoming more and more common these days. Also, I remember several times in Idaho, I got hit by K-band from local Sheriffs. State Highway Patrol in most states has almost always been Ka or Laser.Wendy,
I'm late to this - I haven't been keeping up! Tony told me about this last Saturday.
I have a V1 and keep mine in the Legal Speeding box linked above. It is mounted on my N/Line dash top right. I know you got rid of your J&M (it's on my VStrom!), but that's how I have it coming to my right ear in the helmet.
You already know this, but the J&M setup sucks; no volume control so construction zones can drive you crazy! I tried to splice into the cable to be able to mute with no success, so ended up putting the V1 remote volume gizmo. It doesn't control volume with the J&M cable, but it will turn it off, so that's what I do when I'm in a area it gets annoying.
There's a legitimate argument on V1 vs Escort. The main advantage of V1 is the feature of letting you know where the radar is coming from. I don't know if the Escort is better or worse; others can express that opinion.
It does need to be line of sight, and even then I wouldn't rely on it. I got a performance award in Montana this yr during ITU (on I-15 just north of Helena). My V1 never went off that I know; if it did I missed it.
The time before that I got pulled over was in Georgia in 2010 on I-75. The county deputy never radared me, he fell in behind and paced for 5 miles or so. My V1 didn't ever go off and no one on the CB said anything about it. He was in a SUV so I just thought it was someone that was following at the, er, advanced travel! Lucky on that one, he didn't give me a ticket (it helps to be humble sometimes!). Big lesson that........
If there is anything else I can help/pics/whatever, let me know!
I have never seen quotas or revenue as reasons any of us write ticktes. Here in the western side of the US, unless a city is writing citations under city code, the money for citations goes to the state. I think my agency gets something like $.75 for each citation issued and the citatons cost something like $.50 to $.60 each to have printed. BUT...With the time we get paid overtime for going to court and pretrials and the small fines imposed by judges, I would bet the state is in the hole if they are depending on that for revenue gathering.Do not want to go too far off topic but,AJ- from your experience what would you consider to be the tolerance level for exceeding the limit? And is there a human factor when pulling someone over that has no detector as to someone who has one, with determining whether a ticket will be issued? Are quotas and revenue the main motivation?
Do you like your job?? Maybe that guy just likes writing tickets. I loved it...Actually still do. When I was in traffic and had no other responsibilities besides traffic related stuff, I could write almost 50 tickets in 8 hours. Had nothing to do with a quota, I was just hunting, and the warning not to speed was posted up on those big black and white signs.Agreed Bounce. I hate using statistics to monitor whether someone is doing a good job or not.
All that said, and this is getting a smidge off topic here, but as far as I can see, all money coming or going from a government body, has to be included in a budget somewhere. If ticket revenue is in the budget, someone is going to get upset if the budgeted revenue isn't coming in, thus there's still somewhat of a quota out there.
I often wonder, if the money went to a charity or somewhere else, how much of a focus tickets would be on a police departments daily work. HRZ says that not a lot of money is made by the city. I think things must be different in Texas. City of Mesquite has guys out daily on 635. That officer was super efficient with his time and it took less than five minutes for my ticket from him pulling off the median to back on the median running radar/laser and they got $250 from me for flowing with traffic (literally, car in front of me, behind me and next to me). Literally, he'd gotten back on the highway and was set up before I could gear back up and get on the bike again. I can't help but see that there's a budget getting fattened up there somewhere.
My brother the LEO says as a patrol officer you never talk to anyone that is having a good day....One of the draws of police work seems like it would be the constant change, no two days the same, always something coming up that you haven't seen before...
I put down a thin patch of sticky-back furniture padding on a metal plate to reduce harsh vibrations, then cut windows in the padding and inserted Velcro hooks. I put corresponding Velcro loops on the bottom of the radar detector so it wouldn't hook the padding. I have run that setup for years with no problems....Looks like Velcro on the old dash may be the only solution...
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