Aquineas
4th Genesis
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2010
- Messages
- 4,326
- Reaction score
- 1,117
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Georgetown, TX
- Genesis Model Year
- 2020
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G70
I had a chance this weekend to take about a 700 mile round trip road trip this weekend from Austin to Odessa, Tx and back. During this trip, I had a chance to compare my newly installed Escort 9500ix with Escort Live for Android to my trusty Valentine One.
The Valentine One was purchased in 2004 when I bought my Acura TL and is now on its 3rd car. I have always loved my V1, but honestly, I have been getting a little envious of late of the features that Escort brings to the table, specifically GPS awareness along with Escort Live. I'll get to the specifics of the Passport and Escort Live in a minute, but first my thoughts on the detection capabilities of both. I have both radar detectors mounted on the windshield, maybe 4 inches from the top of the windshield. The V1 was operating in Advanced Logic Mode, and the Passport was operating in stock mode as it came from the factory.
During the trip, the only police radar I encountered that I could positively identify the source was KA band. That being said, I would say that the V1 consistently detected KA band sooner than the Passport 9500ix, sometimes as much as 4 seconds sooner, but usually between 1-2 seconds sooner. When I say consistently, I do not mean 100 percent. There were at least two occasions when the Passport 9500ix notified me sooner than the V1, but the overwhelming majority of the time, the V1 warned me sooner.
Also, contrary to what I read elsewhere on the web, the 9500ix had many, many more false alarms. There was a time when I was wondering if the X-Band detectors of the V1 were even functioning, as repeatedly I observed the 9500ix warning me about X (K Band too, but primarily X) and the V1 was sitting silently. At one point I turned the 9500ix down completely and relied strictly on the visual display of my Motorola Droid because I didn't want to wake my wife along the drive.
So if I were buying strictly a radar detector and I didn't want the GPS and smartphone integration, I would definitely feel comfortable buying the V1. Those of you who already have V1s and are wondering about the same thing I was but aren't sure if the newer detectors perform better, the answer is, they don't. Your V1 is still rockin'. Maybe you'll want to do a software update (as I plan to do), but you still have one of the top detectors on the market. Those of you who don't own a radar detector and you plan on buying one, and you want:
I'd say, buy the V1 and never look back. If however you want other features like GPS or smart phone integration, read on.
Passport 9500ix Specific Features
I was intrigued about the Passport 9500ix, not only because it has GPS capabilities, but also because of Escort Live. Escort Live is an optional kit which comes with a remote display that has two buttons on it: a button you can press at any time to "report" police activity manually, and a mute button. It also integrates with your smart phone via Bluetooth. Escort Live comes in a few permutations, including coil and hardwire options for both iPhones and Android phones.
Since I have a Motorola Droid 4 (sorry folks, it's not the sexiest smart phone, but I'll never give up my keyboard), I had my 9500ix and Escort Live hardwired at Best Buy for $50. Once it was installed, I went home and registered my 9500ix and my Escort Live on the Escort site (registration for Escort Live is required if you want to integrate with your smart phone) and then downloaded the Escort Live app for my Droid. I also was advised by the Escort documentation to update the software on my 9500ix, which required that I download a program onto my PC and plug my detector into my PC's USB port. They also have a Mac version of the software, which I didn't try but perhaps will in the future. Upon starting the app on your phone, it asks you for the username and password you gave during registration of your product. Escort Live won't load without it, and as I found out during my trip, if you lose internet connectivity on your smart phone, the Escort Live app goes to pasture. Some of you might be saying, "Well, what good is it if you don't have an internet to begin with", and I would counter with, when you're running Escort Live, the UI display on your phone provides a little more information in a more quickly digestible format than the LED display on the 9500ix. After the app is running, you have to pair your phone with the SmartWire adapter from Escort (this you must do every time you start the car, btw, which isn't that big of a deal but might bother others).
So what does Escort Live do for you? As I mentioned before, it shares police information with you and other Escort Live users. When you manually report police activity, which you can do via the remote on the Escort Live button or via the UI on your phone, that information is sent via your phone's internet connection back to Escort and disseminated to other Escort Live users. This has huge potential though I should caution that the benefit will be directly proportionate to how many other drivers in the area you happen to be driving are actively using their Escort Live and how accurate it is.
Aside from being able to manually report activity, whenever your detector encounters radar, a display pops up on your phone that lets you either Lock-out a signal (which I did a lot of, considering how many X band alerts I got) or report it back to the network. With X and K band, you have to choose to report or ignore a signal, but KA alerts always report back to Escort (which is exactly what you want since it's rare that KA falses. Not once did my Passport, or my V1 for that matter, indicate KA band activity that wasn't accompanied by 5-0).
So by my very presence and my encountering radar or seeing a law enforcement official and reporting it in, I was in theory benefitting others who might come after me. Because of my hours of travel and potentially some of the roads I was on (it was pretty late or pretty early when we drove, depending on whether we were coming or going), I suspect that I could benefit more from this than I did. I did get alerts that others had reported, but they weren't necessarily current. A typical alert would display something like this (paraphrasing what's in quotes, but it shouldn't be too far off): "Live Radar encountered, KA Band, 41 minutes ago, 2900ft ahead." Of course I slowed down when I saw this, and one time it did in fact save my bacon, so it definitely was useful.
The Passport also lets you know about Speed Cameras, Red-Light Cameras, etc based on your GPS position. We don't (that I know of) have speed cameras in Texas, but we definitely have red-light cameras here. The ones around Austin that I encountered it seemed to warn me about approximately 50 percent of the time, whereas it didn't know any of the obvious red-light cameras that I saw near Odessa.
That's my review; sorry there are no pictures but I wanted to get my thoughts down when they were still fresh.
(Afterthought
A note about Odessa, TX, a place I'd never visited before this weekend. You know that image you have of Texas being flat and dusty with oil wells everywhere you look? That's Odessa. What I found even more curious is how active the police were when I was there. We arrived in Odessa around 1:30am early Saturday morning, and my radar gun literally went off 12 times in that first night alone (so we're talking maybe 25 minutes from the time we arrived to the Odessa area to the time we checked into our hotel.) And I'm not talking the K and X band falsies, I'm talking KA band. So if you're driving around Odessa and you routinely drive 5-10mph over like I do, be careful
The Valentine One was purchased in 2004 when I bought my Acura TL and is now on its 3rd car. I have always loved my V1, but honestly, I have been getting a little envious of late of the features that Escort brings to the table, specifically GPS awareness along with Escort Live. I'll get to the specifics of the Passport and Escort Live in a minute, but first my thoughts on the detection capabilities of both. I have both radar detectors mounted on the windshield, maybe 4 inches from the top of the windshield. The V1 was operating in Advanced Logic Mode, and the Passport was operating in stock mode as it came from the factory.
During the trip, the only police radar I encountered that I could positively identify the source was KA band. That being said, I would say that the V1 consistently detected KA band sooner than the Passport 9500ix, sometimes as much as 4 seconds sooner, but usually between 1-2 seconds sooner. When I say consistently, I do not mean 100 percent. There were at least two occasions when the Passport 9500ix notified me sooner than the V1, but the overwhelming majority of the time, the V1 warned me sooner.
Also, contrary to what I read elsewhere on the web, the 9500ix had many, many more false alarms. There was a time when I was wondering if the X-Band detectors of the V1 were even functioning, as repeatedly I observed the 9500ix warning me about X (K Band too, but primarily X) and the V1 was sitting silently. At one point I turned the 9500ix down completely and relied strictly on the visual display of my Motorola Droid because I didn't want to wake my wife along the drive.
So if I were buying strictly a radar detector and I didn't want the GPS and smartphone integration, I would definitely feel comfortable buying the V1. Those of you who already have V1s and are wondering about the same thing I was but aren't sure if the newer detectors perform better, the answer is, they don't. Your V1 is still rockin'. Maybe you'll want to do a software update (as I plan to do), but you still have one of the top detectors on the market. Those of you who don't own a radar detector and you plan on buying one, and you want:
- The most sensitive detector you can get
- The best made detector you can get (V1s are not made of plastic; they are made of aluminum)
- You don't care about smartphone integration or GPS capabilities (which include some (but not all) fixed speed camera and red light camera alerts)
I'd say, buy the V1 and never look back. If however you want other features like GPS or smart phone integration, read on.
Passport 9500ix Specific Features
I was intrigued about the Passport 9500ix, not only because it has GPS capabilities, but also because of Escort Live. Escort Live is an optional kit which comes with a remote display that has two buttons on it: a button you can press at any time to "report" police activity manually, and a mute button. It also integrates with your smart phone via Bluetooth. Escort Live comes in a few permutations, including coil and hardwire options for both iPhones and Android phones.
Since I have a Motorola Droid 4 (sorry folks, it's not the sexiest smart phone, but I'll never give up my keyboard), I had my 9500ix and Escort Live hardwired at Best Buy for $50. Once it was installed, I went home and registered my 9500ix and my Escort Live on the Escort site (registration for Escort Live is required if you want to integrate with your smart phone) and then downloaded the Escort Live app for my Droid. I also was advised by the Escort documentation to update the software on my 9500ix, which required that I download a program onto my PC and plug my detector into my PC's USB port. They also have a Mac version of the software, which I didn't try but perhaps will in the future. Upon starting the app on your phone, it asks you for the username and password you gave during registration of your product. Escort Live won't load without it, and as I found out during my trip, if you lose internet connectivity on your smart phone, the Escort Live app goes to pasture. Some of you might be saying, "Well, what good is it if you don't have an internet to begin with", and I would counter with, when you're running Escort Live, the UI display on your phone provides a little more information in a more quickly digestible format than the LED display on the 9500ix. After the app is running, you have to pair your phone with the SmartWire adapter from Escort (this you must do every time you start the car, btw, which isn't that big of a deal but might bother others).
So what does Escort Live do for you? As I mentioned before, it shares police information with you and other Escort Live users. When you manually report police activity, which you can do via the remote on the Escort Live button or via the UI on your phone, that information is sent via your phone's internet connection back to Escort and disseminated to other Escort Live users. This has huge potential though I should caution that the benefit will be directly proportionate to how many other drivers in the area you happen to be driving are actively using their Escort Live and how accurate it is.
Aside from being able to manually report activity, whenever your detector encounters radar, a display pops up on your phone that lets you either Lock-out a signal (which I did a lot of, considering how many X band alerts I got) or report it back to the network. With X and K band, you have to choose to report or ignore a signal, but KA alerts always report back to Escort (which is exactly what you want since it's rare that KA falses. Not once did my Passport, or my V1 for that matter, indicate KA band activity that wasn't accompanied by 5-0).
So by my very presence and my encountering radar or seeing a law enforcement official and reporting it in, I was in theory benefitting others who might come after me. Because of my hours of travel and potentially some of the roads I was on (it was pretty late or pretty early when we drove, depending on whether we were coming or going), I suspect that I could benefit more from this than I did. I did get alerts that others had reported, but they weren't necessarily current. A typical alert would display something like this (paraphrasing what's in quotes, but it shouldn't be too far off): "Live Radar encountered, KA Band, 41 minutes ago, 2900ft ahead." Of course I slowed down when I saw this, and one time it did in fact save my bacon, so it definitely was useful.
The Passport also lets you know about Speed Cameras, Red-Light Cameras, etc based on your GPS position. We don't (that I know of) have speed cameras in Texas, but we definitely have red-light cameras here. The ones around Austin that I encountered it seemed to warn me about approximately 50 percent of the time, whereas it didn't know any of the obvious red-light cameras that I saw near Odessa.
That's my review; sorry there are no pictures but I wanted to get my thoughts down when they were still fresh.
(Afterthought

A note about Odessa, TX, a place I'd never visited before this weekend. You know that image you have of Texas being flat and dusty with oil wells everywhere you look? That's Odessa. What I found even more curious is how active the police were when I was there. We arrived in Odessa around 1:30am early Saturday morning, and my radar gun literally went off 12 times in that first night alone (so we're talking maybe 25 minutes from the time we arrived to the Odessa area to the time we checked into our hotel.) And I'm not talking the K and X band falsies, I'm talking KA band. So if you're driving around Odessa and you routinely drive 5-10mph over like I do, be careful
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