LIVING WITH POLICE RADAR
Police use hand-held or
vehicle mounted radar units to monitor the speed of vehicles for the purpose of
traffic law enforcement. The units are "low power" and have a range of
only about one-half mile. The range may be more or less depending upon terrain,
weather, and the size of the target vehicle.
Officers must usually be trained and certified to operate a radar unit and to
testify in court concerning readings obtained with it.
Traffic radar may be operated in the stationary mode or the moving mode. Radar
units are designed either for stationary use only, or may have a switch to
select stationary or moving operation. In the stationary mode the officer parks
the police vehicle at an advantageous location and directs the radar antenna in
the direction of the target vehicle. The target vehicle may be either moving
toward the radar unit or away from it. If the target is large enough or close
enough to reflect the radar signal back to the radar unit, the target's speed
will be recorded.
In the moving mode, the officer's vehicle must be in motion and can monitor the
speed of targets approaching from the opposite direction. The radar unit
measures the speed of the officer's vehicle and the speed of the oncoming target
vehicle. The two speeds are added to each other by the radar's computer. Then
the police vehicle speed is subtracted from the total of the two thus giving the
target speed. The readout is obtained in a fraction of a second.
The radar unit must be calibrated at the beginning of each shift. Some
jurisdictions may require that the unit be calibrated before and after each
radar traffic stop is made. The unit may be calibrated manually and
electronically by the officer. Manual calibration is done by striking a small
tuning fork "cut" for a certain speed and holding the fork in front of
the radar antenna. If properly calibrated, the radar will indicate the same
speed as stamped on that particular tuning fork. The unit is also checked by
pressing a "calibrate" button on the radar and observing the correct
electronic responses indicating that the unit is functioning properly.
Traffic radar is prone to a few errors if not operated by properly trained
personnel. Radar units operated inside the vehicle may read the speed of the
spinning ac/heater fan. This error is obvious because of the constant
"speed" readout in the absence of targets. The officer may re-orient
the antenna or turn off the fan while operating the radar. The radar may read
the speed of an unintended target due to the radar signal being reflected off of
large objects. Or the intended target may be a small import car or motorcycle,
and the speed actually obtained is the "18-wheeler" further down the
road. ( A larger portion of the signal is returned from the
"18-wheeler" even though it is farther away.) These and other errors
are easily avoided by the trained operator who will choose a location favorable
to radar operation and will reject questionable readings when interfering
targets or objects are present.
RADAR DETECTORS
Good radar detectors will detect a signal at a range greater than than that at
which the radar operator can get a reading. The detector may be able to receive
the radar signal a mile or more away, and this range is too great for the radar
signal to be reflected back to the radar unit for a reading. Don't relax yet!
Radar operators frequently leave the unit in the "standby" mode when
no traffic is present. When the officers sees a vehicle which appears to be
speeding, he can take the unit off "standby" thus allowing it to
transmit and "lock" on to the target vehicle. If you're that first
vehicle, your radar detector will "beep", "flash" or
whatever at the same time you're being clocked. This will, however, let the
"cat out of the bag" and alert detector- equipped cars further down
the road. Some operators don't care about detector equipped cars and will leave
the unit on continuously, knowing that there are plenty of non detector-equipped
speeding targets to be had.
POLICE TRAFFIC LASER
Most new, high tech, items used by police agencies are never seen or even heard
of by the general public. This will not be the case with the new traffic laser
guns which began appearing several years ago.
These new handheld speed measuring devices utilize a narrow beam of light,
transmitted in pulses, that strike the target vehicle and then return to the
handheld unit where the speed is calculated.
The laser beam reportedly has a width of only three feet at a range of 1000
feet. This makes it easy to pick a single vehicle out of a pack and obtain not
only a speed readout but the exact distance to the target.
Radar detectors, which detect radio waves, are useless against the new laser
guns.
Shipping
Options
Domestic (US) Shipping
Most orders will be sent via UPS
Ground or USPS Priority.
International Shipping
International
packages will be sent via United States
Postal Service Air method. Your shipping
charge will be based on the weight of
the package. You shipping charge will be
added to the grand total of your order. |
Information line and
Customer Service: In USA and Canada call toll-free
1-888-382-7994
To place your order by phone call
1-800-293-2032 This is an
order line only!
Please
Email Us for
questions!
International orders call
+1-888-382-7994
International fax
+1-210-568-2813
We
accept Visa, MasterCard and Discover.
Order online, Email, fax or call in your
order today!
|
|
|
|