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I use the Yaesu FT-7800 in my vehicle. When I am not on FM repeaters I call
listen to Fire/PD/EMS, ect. If you need trunking or APCO 25 digital, forget the ham radio and use a scanner. 73, "Donald K" wrote in message ... ambrose wrote: Would it be practical to use a ham radio as a scanner?.I understand they have channel memories,scan ability and in many cases cover the bands of interest.The best thing is those with detachable heads that would make mounting in a small vehicle really easy.Is anybody using one for this purpose. Well... I'll give you my experiences, not with mobile rigs, but with HTs. A scanner (Like a Pro-95) is designed as a scanner first, last and only. The banks, bank selection, lock-out etc are all pretty easy and straight-forward to use. My Kenwood TH-F6a, is a tri-band VHF/UHF radio first, and a general coverage receiver/scanner second. (It sucks as a general receiver unless you attach an external antenna, then it is ok). Yes, the TH-F6a has "banks" and "bank select" and "lock out" but they are all secondary functions. Bank select is in a secondary menu. Lock out is a two key press action, etc. The channel scan rate is speedy enough though. The TH-F6a scratches the itch that a scanner does (I usually don't bring both) but it is a bit more of a pain to program and use as a scanner. If I was going into another area and expected significant searching or entry of new frequencies, I *would* bring both. The short story? Unless you are a ham and are significantly going to use a ham rig AS a ham rig, go with a scanner, you'll be happier. My $0.02, -Donald -- "One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words." - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
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