View a PDF of the article: Esquire Magazine – Personal Breathalyzer – April, 2006
AlcoHAWK Elite breathalyzer featured in Esquire Magazine
April 1st, 2006AlcoHAWK Elite, ABI and Precision breathalyzers reviewed by Liquor Snob
December 15th, 2005Alcohawk Breathalyzer Review
We’re big proponents of breathalyzers here at the Liquor Snob offices, because we think their judicious use can really help you keep out of trouble. One of the biggest names in the consumer breathalyzer industry is Alcohawk from Q3 Innovations, which offers a large line of these Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) testers at varying price points.
A couple months ago we covered the Alcohawk Micro keychain breathalyzer, which has been very popular with our readers, and now we’ve rounded up three more Alcohawk models for review and comparison. We’ve outlined the statistics of each model, as well as our favorite features, and then compared them to one another as well so you’ll have the information you need when you buy your own.
Source: Liquor Snob – Alcohawk Breathalyzer Review – December 15, 2005
AlcoHAWK Elite breathalyzer is featured in The Montreal Gazette
November 7th, 2005Portable breathalyzer
Carrying around a breathalyzer is like talking too much about your ex on a first date – ill-advised and likely a deal breaker.
But, while it’s easy to joke about people who own a product such as Q3 Innovation’s Alcohawk Elite, isn’t it better to admit needing a second opinion rather than lurching behind the wheel on intuition alone?
Source: The Montreal Gazette – Portable breathalyzer – November 7, 2005
Product Patrol – Police Magazine
August 12th, 2005Police Magazine’s Product Patrol features AlcoHAWK Elite
View a PDF of the article: Police Magazine – Product Patrol – August, 2005
Wired Magazine puts the AlcoHAWK Elite breathalyzer to the test
June 28th, 2005Alcohawk Elite
This handheld drinking game measures who’s king of the lushes — first person to 0.08 wins! Wait … it’s a Breathalyzer? Oh, I see. To test it, I threw back a shot of vodka, blew into the plastic tube, and measured 0.40 — a level the instruction manual associated with “coma and possible death.” As the Alcohawk chirped away its warning of my impending demise, the instructions revealed that the blood-alcohol content reading works accurately only after a 20-minute lull in drinking, eating, or smoking. So I took three (or four … can’t remember) more shots and waited. After 30 minutes, I blew. My score was a 0.07, a level associated with “impairment of balance, speech, vision, and reaction time.” Great, now I’ve got an excuse for being so sloppy. But there’s no law against writing drunk, so here I am cranking out a review. What was I saying? Wheee! – B.L.
[RATING: 10/8] [ q3ats.com ]










