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Radar Detector - About 80% of todays traffic enforcement uses radar to issue speeding citations. The downside of this technology is that the radar is roughly 80 feet wide at 200 feet. Whats this mean? It means if someone is equipped with a 'good' radar detector, they should be able to detect the cop well before they are tagged. There are 3 bands that are in use in the U.S today:
- X-band (10.525 GHz ± 25 MHz)
- K-band (24.150 GHz ± 100 MHz)
- Ka-band (34.700 GHz ± 1300 MHz)

The other majority holder of issueing citations is laser. Laser is a much more complicated creature to deal with. Laser *requires* a police officer to be stationary, but the beam is only 18 inches at 500 feet. This means there is no reliable 'advanced' warning that a radar detector can provide. If your detector detects laser, it is already too late and you have yourself a ticket. To counter laser to give you ample warning, you will need some sort of laser protection. For this, there are laser jammers and laser applications that eliminate/reduce the time it takes to aquire your speed.
- Laser (904nm, 33MHz bandwidth)
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LE-X2 Laser Jammer T ...
Blinder M47 ...
Blinder M37 ...
BLINDER M27 ...
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