Escort 9500ci Radar Detector – Part One
The new Escort 9500ci radar detector has been creating allots of buzz on the radar detector forums and has become the most anticipated speed countermeasure device by detector enthusiasts since its introduction at January’s CES show. Therefore I was very excited when I found out that I was one of three reviewers selected by Escort Inc. to test drive one of their final production units prior to its release to the public.
Yesterday my UPS driver pulled up lugging what I first thought was a case of radar detectors because of the size of the package but inside I found a single retail 9500ci package containing Escort’s new radar and laser defense system!
Inside the retail box I found three other packages each containing the modular parts and accessories for Escort’s system along with three manuals. After installing countless radar detectors and laser jammers during my career I’m not one to normally read a manual. But after eyeing all the various cables, interfaces and accessories I sat down in my office for an hour reviewing each.
Included with the manual is an Escort product key code card for registering your 9500ci online and allowing access to their online database for software updates and their enforcement camera database.
In a separate package there is a USB cable that interfaces with the 9500ci which allows you to connect your computer to install the software and enforcement camera database updates.
In box one the Control Module, Display Module and speaker is packaged. The LED display is “brilliant blue” in color and the control module has five buttons used to adjust the sensitivity, the volume, to mark locations into the GPS, to power the unit on and off and to mute the detector.
The second box contains the 9500ci’s interface, the radar antenna and an external GPS antenna. The radar detector antenna is the same used with the Beltronics STi-r making it completely undetectable to all police radar detector detectors, including the Spectre.
The interface unit which tucks under the dash is labeled and color coded making it easier to confirm that the correct device is plugged into the correct port.
The external GPS antenna is magnetic and includes a windshield mount to allow mounting in the interior of the car.
The third box contains the ZR4 shifter laser jammers, two heads for the front and one head for the rear. The front shifters have the “ratchet” style mounting system attached and included are secondary mounting brackets. During my previous install and test of the ZR4, I found that I could not properly level the front shifter heads using the “ratchet mounting” system as I was between adjustment points. The proper placement and leveling of the Shifters are of extreme importance and I would encourage anyone doing this install to watch my ZR4 video prior to attempting it.
The 9500ci’s manual states that by default that the Shifters are programmed in receive mode only and must be programmed to active the laser jamming capabilities. I suspect the reason for this is to allow the sale and install of the 9500ci system in states that prohibit such active laser jamming devices.
One of the most anticipated features of the Escort 9500ci is its GPS capabilities allowing the user to mark their own locations, use Escorts speed enforcement camera database and the units ability to sniff out and identify false alarms on its own.
The 9500ci comes preloaded with a database of fixed US traffic enforcement cameras. As camera locations are frequently moved or added by cities and towns I strongly encourage users to download the latest database from Escort’s website on a monthly basis.
By pressing the “Mark Location” on the control module, the user has the ability to add their own locations to the database such as “Speed Trap” locations, “Speed Camera” location, “Red Light Camera” locations and other places of interest.
The Auto Learn/Auto Unlearn feature is for X and K band only. If the exact radar frequency is detected at the same location three times, the 9500ci will automatically lock out this location as a false alarm location. Once this frequency is locked out no alert will be given at this location unless it detects a new signal on a different frequency. Also once a location is self programmed as a false alarm location, if on a subsequent pass that same frequency is not detected the 9500ci removes it from the database.
I suspect that many radar detector enthusiasts will be testing the “Lockout” feature after installing the 9500ci. My experience in doing this type of test is that the user must leave the area prior to doing any subsequent radar tests. From experience the detector remains in “lock out mode” registering other radar alerts until the detector determines through its GPS that the unit has left the “locked out area.”
This coming week I will be installing the 9500ci and performing various radar and laser tests. I plan on videotaping the install along with the alerting features including the detectors ramp up upon detection of a signal.
4 Responses to “Escort 9500ci Radar Detector – Part One”
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You TEASE give us more info on this RD that has the potential to be the BEST PERIOD!
Hi Roy,
Thats a nice preliminary review! If my UPS driver showed up delivering a free 9500ci to me then I would be needing immediate medical attention for my wildly racing heart!
But seriously, the 9500ci is a killer product. Of note, the 9500ci also has a feature to take it out of auto learning mode for false alert locations. This is a very important feature since, when driving around town late at night, automatic door openers at many closed businesses get turned off when the store security systems are armed for the night. If the 9500ci is left in auto learning mode, then I guess it would delete these locked out frequencies since the door openers are not powered on.
Awesome Roy! Can’t wait to see the results of this jammer! I would love to see some results soon of the radar range this unit is capable of and how it compares to other high end models!