Mike Valentine – whose name is synonymous with what are arguably the best radar detectors available and who designed the first truly effective one that others then copied – has passed at the much-too-young age of 74.
I’ve known Mike since the ’90s, when I interviewed him for The Washington Times. I used to be a car columnist and editorial writer there. I liked Mike even before I got to speak with him because he was the guy who gave people like me – who like to drive – our driving enjoyment back. Before radar detectors – and after the advent of the “speed kills” cult that metastasized from a weird obsession of marginal neurotics such as Ralph Nader (who didn’t “speed” because he didn’t even drive)Â driving a car had become both dangerous – to your wallet – and torturous, in that it was necessary to have to constantly be on alert for radar traps manned by government workers looking to extract revenue in the form of what are blandly styled “tickets.”
As if the person who receives one bought one.
Anyhow, Mike’s invention – the radar detector – alerted drivers of the nearby presence of police radar in time to avoid being issued a “ticket.” The radar detector was a great leap forward over the CB radio, which – at the time – was pretty much the only way to get advance notice of a radar trip down the road. All of a sudden, you could enjoy driving again – and not be mulcted by the government (and then the insurance mafia) for “speeding.”
This was a particular godsend – at the time Mike began to sell his first detectors – on the highway because back then, the government had arbitrarily declared that driving faster than 55 MPH was illegal “speeding” and also suddenly “unsafe,” notwithstanding that it had been legal (and considered safe, ipso facto) to drive faster than 55 on pretty much every American highway before Drive 55 went into effect in 1974.
Most highway speed limits prior to this were 60-65 or even 70-75. Just like that, driving those speeds became “speeding” – and also the excuse used by the insurance mafia to make you pay even more than the government did in fines in the form of “adjustments” to your premium. Based on the assertion that your driving at speeds previously legal (and so, presumably, “safe”) had just like that become unsafe.
A single ticket for “speeding” could cost hundreds of dollars in court costs, fines and insurance “adjustments” that weren’t just a one-time but an ongoing mulcting. And if you had the bad luck to get another ticket during the three years following your conviction for your first such offense, before the first one faded off your “record,” it could and regularly did cost thousands in insurance “adjustments.”
This is how millions of Americans were relieved of millions of dollars.
Mike helped staunch the bleed – and gave us back the road. I can attest to this from my own experiences, years before I got to speak with Mike for purposes of doing a story about him. I got my first radar detector right after I got out of college and it probably kept me from going to jail. I did a lot of driving in those just-after-college days, in part because I wanted to see the country and because I was looking for work. I drove across the country (and back) twice. It would have taken me much longer – and been a lot less fun – without Mike riding shotgun. So to speak.
When I finally got to speak with him, I told him all about that – and thanked him for all he’d done to bring back the fun of driving. The cloying 55 MPH National Maximum Speed Limit was finally ended in 1994 – with Mike’s active support and help, along with the National Motorists Association, an organization both Mike and I have been affiliated with since the ’90s (Mike for longer than that).
He told me about his detectors, how they worked – and what they could do. Mike was a really smart guy. But he was also something else and more, which I can also attest to. He was a good dude. Patient, humble and self-effacing. Some very smart people aren’t and it spoils their smartness. Mike’s genuineness enhanced the appeal of his smartness.
He is gone much too soon.
I will say goodbye to him in my own way, later today. The rains of the hurricane have passed, so the coast is clear to fire up the Orange Barchetta and make some noise and leave some tracks.
I hope Mike will be able to hear and see. I salute you, sir!
Godspeed.
. . .
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A true American hero. Stuck his finger in the .gov eye and made a buck off of it also.
He was a big time ham radio operator with the call-sign W8MM
https://www.arrl.org/news/arrl-philanthropist-radar-detector-pioneer-michael-valentine-w8mm-silent-key
He had a picture of his extensive antenna system on QRZ.com
This write-up has some background on his business. https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a62285837/mike-valentine-obituary/
Anon
A true American hero. Stuck his finger in the .gov eye and made a buck off of it also.
He was a big time ham radio operator with the callsign W8MM
https://www.arrl.org/news/arrl-philanthropist-radar-detector-pioneer-michael-valentine-w8mm-silent-key
He had a picture of his extensive antenna system on QRZ.com
Anon
Damn!…..
“Mike Valentine and his partner were the Genesis for the Escort detector”
I can attest to the quality of the original Escort detector!
In 1988 four of us high school guys loaded up in my friends brand new Audi 5000S and headed for spring break in Fort Lauderdale.
My friend who owned the Audi (He had wealthy parents) asked me to drive, so we left Syracuse NY and arrived in Fort Lauderdale 14 hours later. 90-110 mph the entire trip. 🙂
That early model Escort radar detector busted EVERY cop the whole way.
What a great time it was to be alive.
Thank you Mr. Valentine. You will be missed.
That’s an amazing trip time! Awesome. Guessing 95 wasn’t as busy back then?
I’d did similar trips while roadracing and it was 18hrs, but in a crappy old van loaded up that didn’t even like 70 haha.
I do remember going to Road Atlanta once, in the early 90’s and I had an older honda prelude cause the team was taking the van. I had moved up in the RR world!
Forget the road, but it was from the charlotte area to GA and in the wee hrs of the morning zero cars. Had those earlier detectors too, and just put the pedal to the floor, about 100-105, for hours and made it in time for first practice. That little 4cl was never the same after that!
And at that years final, went to pass last turn last lap for the win and potential factory ride and crashed out in front of everyone and my team. happens……. 🙂 win or go home, we went home. IMO 2nd didn’t matter, so I went for it.
“That little 4cl was never the same after that!”
Yes my friends Audi broke it’s timing belt later that week while still in FL. The Audi was so smooth. We cruised at 90 and would slowly creep up to about 109 when my friend would lean over and say “aren’t we going a little fast” and I would back it back down to 90. This went on the whole trip. 🙂
Yes Interstate 81 and I-90 we’re quite friendly back then. We passed cars like they were standing still yet there didn’t seem to be anything dangerous about what we were doing.
The real danger out there was the police and they were plentiful.
That escort made that wonderful journey possible.
Interstate 81 and I-95′
‘Interstate 81 and I-95’
Great memories of a bygone era of which I have zero recollection. Must have been pretty good. I got my license in 1980. At that time, the new 55 mph compliance requirements were in effect and highway speeds were dropping. As time went on and at least 6 or 7 states were under threat of losing part of their federal highway money, the patrols became more stealthy and more agressive. By 1986, it had hit a critical mass. The first bill to relax the speed limit to 65 mph failed in the house. In 1987, it was brought up again and was passed by a 211-204 vote margin in the house. In the senate, the 65 mph bill passed by 56 to 33. Reagan vetoed and it was overriden 65-34.
With the additional breathing room, motorists did not have to worry as much, but rural interstate speeds rose about 2-3 mph in 1987. The detector industry undoubtedly took a hit, but not for long. By the time the Valentine One came around in 1992, highway travel speeds were at their 1973 levels and climbing.
I got my first valentine in 1997 and kept it till it burned out in 2004. I got another one that I kept until it was stolen in 2011. Those V1s were solid. I’m not sure, but I think that the V-1 saved me from at least three tickets, enough to pay for the detector.
Due to my advancing age and the higher speed limits (I live in a 75 mph state), I haven’t had much of a need for one, but I hope to get a detector of some kind next year.
In any case, I got to talk to Valentine on the phone about the arrows and the Ka band detection. He was a great man.
Thanks Mike for making driving safer for people like me.
May he be given a hero’s welcome and a golden eternity in the Elysian Fields.
Eric – great Valentine eulogy, thanks.
His detectors were so advanced that for a Car and Driver
test/review, a competing manufacture had put Mike’s
detector in their own, and got caught.
May his memory be eternal.
Wow – what a hero of our time. I didnt know he invented the radar detector… May he rest in peace.
He invented or developed the first auto radar detector?
May he RIP.
No not the inventor of the radar detector. That would have been the Fuzzbuster.
Mike Valentine and his partner were the Genesis for the Escort detector which arguably was the first modern radar detector that could detect multiple radar bands and reject some of the false alerts.
Here’s more background on this amazing man.
https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a62285837/mike-valentine-obituary/
Thanks
We have three Gen2 Valentines. Every week, they pay a dividend. Michael, my family stands and salutes!
I have two of his detectors; one in my car, one in the wife’s car.
Saved me untold thousands of dollars over the decades.
Unfortunately the other down side of all this ADAS driver assistance crap is the increase in false alerts due to radar modules on cars for ACC, blind spot detection, etc.
I know his newer detectors are better at filtering out the ADAS false alerts but the cost to replace two detectors vs the reduction in false alerts hasn’t yet crossed the threshold of economic viability.
Mike Valentine was a true American hero. Unlike, the AGWs that insist on being called hero’s at our expense even as they kill innocents because they were “afraid for their personal safety”. Cowards.
RIP Mr. Valentine!