
Originally Posted by
gtnos
Im about to pull the trigger on a 9500ix. (yes, i know there are better long range detectors like redline, but i think for me the 9500ix is the best option)
I have been searching and reading thread after thread on here about false K and Ka alerts and cant seem to find the answers im looking for.
How do you spot falses on these bands? (i dont care about X, no one uses it here)
From my understanding, there are few, if any Ka falses. From my reading, i have learned that the Cobra detectors leak Ka. So, how do i tell if a Ka alert im getting is from a Cobra detector or another source?
does anyone have like a list of frequencies that will pop up on my detector on K and Ka band that are known falses? or a list of all the known true sources? it seems to me that since the display on the detector will show the frequency that i should be able to determine if its a true bogey or not.
im trying to learn how to use and read the detector, IMHO without knowing this, as far as im concerned, its probably just a useless piece of electronics hanging off my windshield.
i want to know how to use it.
thanks in advance for any and all info.
The only real way to identify a false is to see it and recognize it. Also, with a little experience with your detector, you will know how it reacts to alerts. After a while it is not that hard but it always a pain specially in unknown territory. If you go ahead with the 9500IX it will solve most of your problems in your day to day drive as after a few drive-by it will automatically lock out the falses.
With the Redline or 9500IX you won't have problems with False Ka. I don't think giving you the frequencies will really help because 99.9% of your falses will be on K band and X band and K band is only 100mhz wide. It means that a false frequency will be extremely close to a real encounter frequency. As comparison, Ka is 1300mhz wide.
Falses don't last too long, maybe a few hundred feet and it is fairly easy to locate the cause of it. If you are the only car on the freeway in the middle of the desert, chances are it won't be a false. Now, drive in NYC and you will probably toss your detector out the window if you drive there for the first time. Just putting your detector in City No X mode will greatly help reducing the falses.
Where I live, on highway mode I have 5 falses on the way to work. With City No X I have 2. More or less 50% reduction
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