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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
A while back i saw some infomercial about a protective license plate
cover to will reflect any red light cameras that tries to take a picture of the license plates. Does anyone know the name of this protective cover? Any website carrying this? Thanks. |
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#2
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
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#3
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
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#4
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
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#5
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
wrote:
> A while back i saw some infomercial about a protective license plate > cover to will reflect any red light cameras that tries to take a > picture of the license plates. Does anyone know the name of this > protective cover? Any website carrying this? Thanks. Googling "license plate cover, red light cameras" returned http://www.laserveil.com/license-plate/covers/ in "0.30 seconds". Are you certain you should be driving? (I think I hurt my finger.) ----- - gpsman |
#6
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
> gpsman said in rec.autos.driving:
> wrote: > > A while back i saw some infomercial about a protective license plate > > cover to will reflect any red light cameras that tries to take a > > picture of the license plates. Does anyone know the name of this > > protective cover? Any website carrying this? Thanks. > > Googling "license plate cover, red light cameras" returned > http://www.laserveil.com/license-plate/covers/ in "0.30 seconds". From the website: "VEIL works by significantly reducing the reflection that occurs from today's high-tech retro-reflective license plates." Wouldn't a piece of steel wool and a little elbow grease accomplish the same thing? > > Are you certain you should be driving? (I think I hurt my finger.) There you go again, assuming that government is completely honest, forthright, aboveboard and ethical. -- F orever B enefitting I slam |
#7
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
necromancer wrote: <brevity snip>
> > gpsman said in rec.autos.driving: > > wrote: > > > A while back i saw some infomercial about a protective license plate > > > cover to will reflect any red light cameras that tries to take a > > > picture of the license plates. Does anyone know the name of this > > > protective cover? Any website carrying this? Thanks. > > > > Googling "license plate cover, red light cameras" returned > > http://www.laserveil.com/license-plate/covers/ in "0.30 seconds". > > > Are you certain you should be driving? (I think I hurt my finger.) > > There you go again, assuming that government is completely honest, > forthright, aboveboard and ethical. There you go again with a spurious conclusion... based on no evidence. I think I might reasonably conclude a driver wishing to avoid RLC's is not the smartest driver. As evidence I pointed to his inability to perform a simple search that would have provided the information he sought... in less than a half-second. I have no need to avoid RLC's so I have a hard time seeing why anyone else would,.. unless they run red lights on a fairly regular basis. Stop means stop. I don't see what might be so difficult to understand about that. If a driver is paying attention he should be able to easily identify a stale green and should expect it to turn red... since they so often do. ----- - gpsman |
#8
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
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#9
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
> gpsman said in rec.autos.driving:
> Stop means stop. I don't see what might be so difficult to understand > about that. If a driver is paying attention he should be able to > easily identify a stale green and should expect it to turn red... since > they so often do. So, if RLR is such a problem, why not find a solution to the problem that doesn't involve highway robbery? (See: http://tinyurl.com/j8llo scroll to the part about increasing yellow light timing and its corresponding reduction in RLR) Unless, ofcourse, you stan to benefit financially from such highway robbery... The fact is that revenue starved (or just plain greedy) juristictions tamper with traffic lights to inflate the number of violators and the amount of revenue they get. And before you ask, see http://tinyurl.com/fqmdh and http://tinyurl.com/j8llo and http://tinyurl.com/ebbl4 (scroll down to point 4) And last, but not least, there is this little burg where I live where not a a week after the first red light scamera want live, the mayor wanted to spend $35 000 on this: http://tinyurl.com/l46o6 (article reproduced below the .sig) if you can see the article on the website w/o registration, there is a nice pic of da mayr standing next to da stump. -- I diots N umbskulls & S hitheads ==================================== Massive oak may live anew Mon, Jul 10, 2006 City may turn tree into sculpture of historical figure By KEITH LAING The Brunswick News The city of Brunswick is contemplating giving an oak tree felled during a K Street sewer repair project new life. Mayor Bryan Thompson said the city is considering hiring a professional sculptor to carve the fully grown tree that had once shaded K Street between Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Amherst Street into a community landmark that celebrates the lives of prominent Georgians. Mayor Bryan Thompson says the city of Brunswick is considering hiring a professional sculptor to turn a 180,000 pound oak tree that was removed during a sewer repair project into a landmark that celebrates the lives of prominent Georgians. (James Nix/The Brunswick News) The tree weighs more than 180,000 pounds. Among those being considered to be commemorated are Georgia founder James Oglethorpe, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. and poet Sidney Lanier. The project is expected to cost about $35,000. Neighborhood residents expressed displeasure when the tree was removed late last year. Thompson said the sculpture would be the city's way of apologizing to them. "That tree should have never come down, but we now have the opportunity to bring it back in an altered form, re-done in a way that should last indefinitely," he said. He added that the sculpture would be a welcome addition to the city landscape. "There would be nothing else like it in the community," Thompson said. "We think it's going to be embraced." A former artist himself, Thompson said that the key to making the project successful would be allowing the effected neighborhood to participate in the tree's renaissance. He said he hopes Pennslyvania-based artist Joe King will be able to do more than carve the tree while he is here. "I like the idea of being able to use the artist to teach wood carving classes so that it's more than somebody coming in, carving the tree up and there it is," he said. King agreed to offer his expertise to the community during a teleconference with Thompson and City Manager Roosevelt Harris last week. He also expressed an enthusiasm for the project. "It's a very exciting project," King said. "It's nice to be able to salvage something that's almost like a piece of history." |
#10
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License covers to reflect red light cameras?
necromancer wrote: <brevity snip>
> > gpsman said in rec.autos.driving: > > Stop means stop. I don't see what might be so difficult to understand > > about that. If a driver is paying attention he should be able to > > easily identify a stale green and should expect it to turn red... since > > they so often do. > > So, if RLR is such a problem, why not find a solution to the problem > that doesn't involve highway robbery? (See: http://tinyurl.com/j8llo > scroll to the part about increasing yellow light timing and its > corresponding reduction in RLR) I think I'm fully aware of the problems concerning RLC's and the profit enhancement techniques of the timing of yellows by the RLC provider. Guess how I avoid running red lights. It's pretty simple, I don't run them. The yellow would have to be incredibly short to catch *me*... because I operate at the SL or below in every environment where RL's exist. You might consider that the drivers who have problems with the yellow timings are drivers who are speeding and/or inattentive. The more often those drivers are cited, the happier I am. That's just my POV, I make no claim that it's "right". ----- - gpsman |
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