Cincinnati philanthropist and radar detector pioneer Michael Valentine died unexpectedly Monday at his home, according to his obituary. He was 74. Valentine was the founder of Cincinnati Microwave and ...
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." The automotive industry has lost one of the great saviors of speed. Michael Valentine, president of ...
Many auto enthusiasts might recognize Valentine from full-page ads like this that regularly appeared in Road and Track magazine for the Valentine V1, back in the halcyon days of print media. Those ads ...
These electronic copilots can pick up speed traps, red-light cameras, and more.
Radar detector pioneer Michael Valentine has died. The young engineer founded Cincinnati Microwave after graduating from the University of Cincinnati with a degree in electrical engineering. He saved ...
Have you ever been saved by a radar detector? Was it one with the little arrows on it, to tell you where the cop actually is? If so, you have Michael Valentine to thank for that money you saved. Pour ...
Michael Valentine, an electrical engineer with a passion for fast cars and open roads who gave drivers a ticket-avoiding tool as one of the key developers behind the modern radar detector, died Sept.
FUN FACT: Alex Roy, author of The Driver, used a Valentine One on his record Cannonball Rally cross country drive.
Pairing a quality radar detector like the Valentine One V1 Gen 2 (the new version of the legendary original Valentine One that we’ve been testing and that is pictured installed in our vehicle above) ...
Radar speed-detection capabilities were first developed in 1935 by a Bobby in Britain who had his eyes set on your wallet. Some 30 years on, a fed-up comrade and engineer invented one of the earliest ...