Rocky Mountain Radar RMR-D250 Radar/Laser Detector Review

Rocky Mountain Radar RMR-D250 Radar/Laser Detector
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After wasting money on this, you'll waste more money on tickets. I would not have bought this company's product if I had read these independent test results first! Below are just excerpted quotes. Please follow the links for the complete, often juicy, stories.
An Owner Speaks
"I made a big mistake buying and relying on Rocky Mountain Radar's radar/laser detector/scrambler products. That's right, 'products' is plural. I've owned three...none of them worked."
Full article: "My Seven Costly Mistakes Involving Rocky Mountain Radar Products" [...]
--Radar BustersTest Results
"The bottom line is that during our testing of these units we have NEVER found one unit to work. The RMR-C302 had no noticeable effect on our K band gun...and with the laser the RMR-C302 had no effect."
--Roy Reyer, retired cop and certified radar trainer.
[...]"I tested Rocky Mountain Radar devices on two occasions... I can tell you without a doubt -- the jammers did not work at all! They did not jam radar, confuse radar, block radar, scramble radar, nor did they render a car invisible to radar. The same goes with police lasers: the jammers had no affect. Rocky Mountain Radar is ripping off consumers for millions of dollars and no one is doing anything about it."
--Tom Martino, Troubleshooter.com
[...]"The [RMR Phazer and Phantom] score of "0" means the device had no jamming effect on laser guns what-so-ever!" --LaserRadar.com
[...]
"In reaction to past stories we've written for Automobile Magazine, the BMW Roundel, Mercedes Star, AutoTronics and Car Audio & Electronics, among others, the resourceful [RMR founder] Churchman quickly renamed these same boxes--the new appellations include Illusion, Shadow, Eclipse, Patriot and Avenger among others--and continued doing business without missing a beat. He's also produced several private-label versions with names like Barrier-RDR and Barrier-LSR. Except for the Phantom, which contains rudimentary radar-detection circuitry, each is essentially an empty box with a 12-volt power cord, a cheap cast-plastic waveguide assembly, one or two front-mounted LEDs, a basic power-supply circuit and a button or two. Press the button and an LED lights up, accompanied by a tinny bird whistle. We've tested these products a dozen times against every front-line police radar gun and laser, finding all of them utterly worthless."
--Craig Peterson, RadarTest.com
[...]


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