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Old July 16th 04, 06:03 AM
Christopher Blunck
 
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Default HF scanner recommendation

Hello-

A coworker of mine talks about how interesting HF is. He's moving and has
been nice enough to give me one of his old HF receiver antennas. It's a
Dressler (not sure the exact model) but he said it's good for receiving
skywave and other HF signals.

I've been looking around on the net and all scanners I can find for HF
seem to be $200 or greater. I'm really just a beginner (don't even have a
technicians license), and only have an old Uniden Bearcat scanner. Up
until now I didn't even have an antenna on the roof. I'm trying to take
advantage of this situation (my friend being nice enough to give me an old
antenna he says is quite good) and expand my horizons, but I'm not trying
to break the bank in doing so. Are there $100 HF "beginner" kits out
there? I don't necessarily need programmable dial entries - just a basic
tuner to get me started.

Any ideas or recommendations?


-c
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Old July 18th 04, 09:09 PM
Fred McKenzie
 
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Default

A coworker of mine talks about how interesting HF is. He's moving and has
been nice enough to give me one of his old HF receiver antennas. It's a
Dressler (not sure the exact model) but he said it's good for receiving
skywave and other HF signals.

Christopher-

I don't think your experience with the Uniden Bearcat compares with listening
to HF. The Bearcat is normally used to listen to VHF and UHF public service
stations such as fire and police, on radio channels that are silent between
transmissions. When the channel goes silent, the radio's squelch closes and it
scans to other channels to look for activity.

HF is a noisy band. There are not only Ham Radio conversations, there are
foreign broadcast stations, Military communications, long-distance aircraft
communications, et cetera. The squelch would stay open most of the time if you
tried to scan HF.

I suspect there is at least one news group like this one, but dedicated to
Shortwave Listening (SWL). If you search it out, you can get an idea what
interests other people.

Good radios for SWL use are much like Ham receivers, and generally cost as much
as a deluxe VHF/UHF scanner. Examples might be a Kenwood R-5000, Drake R-8B,
Yaesu FRG-100B, Icom R-75, et cetera. (One source for new SWL radios might be
Amateur Electronic Supply, http://www.aesham.com/.)

Less expensive radios are available, but look for a used one in your price
range. Popular examples might be the Sangean ATS-803A or the Radio Shack
Realistic DX-440. These have long been discontinued, but show up often on
E-Bay.

73, Fred, K4DII

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Old July 18th 04, 09:09 PM
Fred McKenzie
 
Posts: n/a
Default

A coworker of mine talks about how interesting HF is. He's moving and has
been nice enough to give me one of his old HF receiver antennas. It's a
Dressler (not sure the exact model) but he said it's good for receiving
skywave and other HF signals.

Christopher-

I don't think your experience with the Uniden Bearcat compares with listening
to HF. The Bearcat is normally used to listen to VHF and UHF public service
stations such as fire and police, on radio channels that are silent between
transmissions. When the channel goes silent, the radio's squelch closes and it
scans to other channels to look for activity.

HF is a noisy band. There are not only Ham Radio conversations, there are
foreign broadcast stations, Military communications, long-distance aircraft
communications, et cetera. The squelch would stay open most of the time if you
tried to scan HF.

I suspect there is at least one news group like this one, but dedicated to
Shortwave Listening (SWL). If you search it out, you can get an idea what
interests other people.

Good radios for SWL use are much like Ham receivers, and generally cost as much
as a deluxe VHF/UHF scanner. Examples might be a Kenwood R-5000, Drake R-8B,
Yaesu FRG-100B, Icom R-75, et cetera. (One source for new SWL radios might be
Amateur Electronic Supply, http://www.aesham.com/.)

Less expensive radios are available, but look for a used one in your price
range. Popular examples might be the Sangean ATS-803A or the Radio Shack
Realistic DX-440. These have long been discontinued, but show up often on
E-Bay.

73, Fred, K4DII

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