Secondly, since the second head
is firing, it is emitting a pulse width to jam, making it very effective. If I shoot your car (equipped with LI's) with lidar and there is a car parked on the side of the road with LI's facing the direction which you are driving, the beam of the laser will reflect off your car hitting the car on the side of the road, which alarms the jammers, emitting a pulse rate to jam. This is why when we have tests when make cars on the side of the road who are waiting to be tested turn their jammers off. Otherwise, the results get skewed because instead of only 2 head firing on the test course, you could end up with 10-12 heads firing from other cars.
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