Home > Consumer Reviews > Beltronics Express 946 Cordless Radar / Laser Detector

Beltronics Express 946 Cordless Radar / Laser Detector

See it at Amazon.com for $59.99

Average Customer Rating
(3.0 out of 5)

Amazon Customer Reviews

Most Helpful First | Newest First | + Share
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:

Great radar detector

(4 out of 5) by Tim on Feb 22, 2005 (Houston, TX)
I have been using my BEL 936 Express for 3 years now (paid $95 new in 2002). I drive like a maniac. The only ticket I have gotten since I started using this was at 5am and the cop driving down the other side of the road didn't have his radar on until he saw me come along. The BEL 936 picked it up right away after he turned it on, but by then it was too late. No radar detector will be able to detect radar that isn't on. I have to say that the guy who left the review in November of 2004 (below this one) gave it bad reviews, but he isn't even reviewing the same product. He says right there in his review that he was using a different model. Likewise, there was another negative review in relation to another BEL model, not the 936 Express. The reason some of these detectors stopped working is likely do to the users leaving it out in the sun while they are not in their cars. The heat will destroy the electronics eventually. To avoid this, take it down when you go inside. Put it under the seat or in the console. I get a few false positives on X-band, but Ka and K are always reliable. I use "CITY X" mode almost always unless I'm on the highway. I have detected laser with this unit. I have picked up K and Ka as far as 3 miles away on the open road while driving across Louisiana in the middle of nowhere. The only problem I have had in the past 3 years is the speaker died. I ordered a new speaker from BEL for $7 including shipping. I installed it myself and now the unit works like a charm again. I highly recommend this. They are really cheap on eBay now. You can get them for under $40 brand new.

16 of 22 people found the following review helpful:

Sort of a waste of money in my opinion

(1 out of 5) by Britt Cain on May 29, 2002 (Chicago, IL)
I've tried this unit in two different cars in a wide range of driving conditions. The false alerts will drive you crazy, even on city mode. I find that I'm hardly using it because it's always beeping. When I enabled the VG2 alert, it was constantly false alarming, and telling me that radar may be in use (there's no way there are that many radar guns being used on an empty interstate in the middle of nowhere, or even in heavy city traffic for that matter). My first ticket in 10 years happened on my first road trip using this new detector.

The speaker is on the right side of the unit, so it's perfect for the front seat passenger to hear loud and clear. Hmm... maybe it was designed for right hand drive cars? The volume control is very tedious to use. It's the same button as the power, so you have to press and hold it just right or it will just turn off. Basically, if you have it loud enough to hear clearly, your passenger is being blasted.

If you're thinking that the SWS feature is nice (as I did) take a look at where SWS is in use. I've driven through alot of places with this detector in use and SWS has never activated.

I think I'll go back to my old Uniden Stalker - I have never gotten a ticket while using it and it couldn't be easier to use. It even falses MUCH less than the Bell.


13 of 18 people found the following review helpful:

Deaf, Dumb and Blinding

(2 out of 5) by John Lenon on Sep 3, 2001 (Central Arizona)
I'm sorry to have to write a review like this, but I wish someone else had. It would have saved me the time and trouble of buying and returning this 'severely challenged' radar detector.

I 'tested' the Bel Express 936 for a little more than a week. During that week I drove approx. 900 miles, experiencing a variety of driving conditions, from high-rise inner-city business districts to two-lane rural mountain roads.

Really, the only good thing I have to say about this radar detector is it is quiet - the quietest radar detector I have ever owned. As a matter of fact, it doesn't do much of anything except look pretty. For those of you that are looking for an attractive radar detector that doesn't make a lot of noise, this Bel is for you. Everyone else, keep reading.

There is hardly any reason to comment on the windshield bracket. However, if this is the first Bel radar detector review you have read, Bel makes the worst windshield bracket in the industry, so I won't belabor the point. Take my word for it, and countless others. The same criticism applies to the flimsy visor clamp. The 'Velcro' strip isn't bad if you have a dash mat.

The digital readout seems like a dandy idea in the store. In the real world, however, you will find that it is too bright at night and too dim during the day. It is, for the most part, useless. LED indicators would have been a much better idea.

How about the voice alert? This actually works pretty well. The only problem is you can't hear it, since the speaker is mounted on the right-hand side of the case.

Another major complaint is the power plug location. Bel put it on the left-hand side of the case ensuring the drooping power cord is constantly in your way.

The only logical place to mount this unit is on the dash (using the hook-n-loop strip), next to the A-pillar. Once there, you can easily get to the top-mounted buttons, hear the voice alerts, and ignore the annoying digital display. The power cord is also out of the way. This, of course, doesn't address the biggest problem of all - the fact that the unit itself doesn't work very well. How bad is it?

As you may have figured out by now, the Bel Express 936 is a 'Sleeping Beauty.' It DOES detect radar, but it doesn't give you much time to do anything about it. When and if this unit actually goes off, you had better believe a traffic cop has you locked in his sights. My experience has been that this detector will give you anywhere from a few hundred feet to a 1/4 mile of warning. That's it! And, that's only if the cop is directly in front of you. You can forget about cops to the side and rear of your vehicle. I can assure you this radar detector does! This thing is so dead to the world that it doesn't even 'max-out' when you pass within a few feet of a bogie.

I am now 'testing' a Bel 980. I was so disappointed by the Bel Express 936, that I decided to buy Bel's top-of-the-line radar detector. Why? My thoughts were this. I decided if the 980 didn't work any better than the Express 936, I would return it and never buy another Bel product. I am pleased to report that I have 'tested' the Bel 980 for an equal amount of time and distance, and it'll be a 'keeper.'

Really, my friends, if are interested enough in the Bel Express 936 to have read this far, please, listen to me. Don't buy this radar detector. In the end, you will feel like a jilted lover. Save your milk money and buy a Bel 980 instead. I will post a review of the Bel 980 soon, and it won't read like this.


6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:

Unusable - False sense of security

(1 out of 5) by Lori J. Bremer on Aug 14, 2001 (Apple Valley, MN United States)
I had the Express 916 for two months. It worked great for the first month, then just stopped. It turned on and went through all the motions of working, running through all the bands and the laser detector sounds, but never went off again. I had someone with another radar detector follow me around to make sure it wasn't working and sure enough. The other detector would go off passing a police officer, through a construction zone and other places where it normally would have gone off before and nothing from the Express 916 this time.

4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:

annoyance

(1 out of 5) by Robert L. McComas on Sep 14, 2001 (Gig Harbor, WA USA)
The city setting on this unit is terrible. You cannot drive in any halfway busy area without it going off constantly on K or Ka band. My old passport that finally died was 500 percent better than this. I just returned from a drive to Portland Or. and this thing drove us nuts.