<VV> Radar/LIDAR & Front Plates <-- Correct-o-mundo
jvhroberts at aol.com
jvhroberts at aol.com
Sun Dec 9 12:27:27 EST 2012
Here's where a V1 comes in handy. They were shooting lidar up Rt. 1 near Milford here, from an overpass. I picked it up, through the front and rear windows of no fewer than 7 cars in front of me. Also, if there's any haze in the air, it will cause scattering, which a V1 can pick up.
The V1 has the best Lidar detector out there, and the inventor, Mike Valentine, will tell you straight up it's not good enough.
The bottom line, lidar is used in heavy traffic because it can pick out individual cars. However, in heavy traffic, if they're shooting the thing regularly, a V1 will most likely detect it from the targets in front of it.
If you're the only guy out there, even radar will get you.
John Roberts
-----Original Message-----
From: Charlie <chaz at properproper.com>
To: gwydionjhr <gwydionjhr at outlook.com>; virtualvairs <virtualvairs at corvair.org>
Sent: Sun, Dec 9, 2012 10:00 am
Subject: Re: <VV> Radar/LIDAR & Front Plates <-- Correct-o-mundo
Actually, I left out some details re the radar/LIDAR distinctions, to
simplify my plight:
To quote the article I read (Word 2007 docx attached) :
"This small beam width has another added benefit - it cannot be detected
until after a speed measurement is already made. Testing of the most
advanced detectors has shown that when officers aim properly (at the
vehicle's front license plate instead of the windshield where the detector
usually sits), the signal often goes undetected."
When I got stopped, I alluded to the cop that he "got the wrong car" and so
he claimed that's not true about LIDAR.
Maybe true, but I managed to prove that he didn't actually have LIDAR, since
his LIDAR unit (as stated on his citation) was in fact out for repair on the
day he claimed he used it on me!
(He said I that printed the receipt in PhotoShop, and the judge bought it,
ignoring my certified copy.)
His LIDAR unit, as I said in court, "has spent more time in the shop than my
car," at least 4 times since it was "assigned" to him. Since it was "in the
shop" he used a "leftover radar" unit instead, according to his captain.
Anyway, that's how I learned about license plates being used to trap
speeders (or in my case, innocent "dolphins in their tuna net"?)
And, as you said, the "prominent downward angle on the front of the LM" may
be what saved me from all my "priors" (which is one reason I figured it was
a bargain only getting caught this one time, even if I was innocent. It's
the Murphy's-based irony, under the cloud of which I live. Murphy only
leaves my side to visit his joys on others, but he LIVES here;>}~!)
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