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"DougSlug" wrote in message
. net... SSB is rarely, if ever, used on VHF/UHF, so typical VHF/UHF scanners have only AM/FM/WFM I use SSB on 2m (the low 144's) and 70cm (around 430.000), as do a lot of hams. -- 73! de Andy KC2SSB http://shorecogs.tripod.com AIM: shorecogs |
True enough...however I would still consider that "rare" from the
perspective of someone interested in scanning, and it is true that most VHF/UHF scanners don't offer SSB. Hams that operate those bands on SSB generally have a different class of rig altogether. I often monitor the SSB sub-band on 2m with a communications receiver and an outdoor 2m antenna mounted above the house, and I've never heard a thing...I consider that rare. YMMV. - Doug "Andy in NJ" SHORECOGS at COMCAST DOT NET wrote in message ... "DougSlug" wrote in message . net... SSB is rarely, if ever, used on VHF/UHF, so typical VHF/UHF scanners have only AM/FM/WFM I use SSB on 2m (the low 144's) and 70cm (around 430.000), as do a lot of hams. -- 73! de Andy KC2SSB |
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Most scanners do not handle SSB mode. That's generally only available on
communications receivers, except mine. On my Ic-R3, it's labeled as a "communications reciever", but it doesn't do SSB even though it covers the entire shortwave band. I think that they should have included SSB mode in it. |
If everyone starts using trunked, then buying scanner that wouldn't
decode trunked signals would be a bad investment. O that's another one of the faults of the IC-R3. It doesn't do trunk-tracking. |
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