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AR8200 MK3 opinion
I'm new to this, but am interested. I was looking online at some
portable scanners and found this one. AR8200 MK3 Is it any good? It seems to have a large frequency range (500kHz to 3GHz). I am not sure if the frequency range is what I should be looking at to determine whether it's a good scanner or not. Any opinions? Comments? Advice? -- clu |
AR8200 MK3 opinion
On Mon, 24 Oct 2005 22:20:16 -0700, clu said in
rec.radio.scanner: I'm new to this, but am interested. I was looking online at some portable scanners and found this one. AR8200 MK3 Is it any good? It seems to have a large frequency range (500kHz to 3GHz). I am not sure if the frequency range is what I should be looking at to determine whether it's a good scanner or not. It's a receiver, not a scanner. |
AR8200 MK3 opinion
What's the difference between a scanner and receiver? One of the key
features for the AR8200 MK3 says, "Extensive search & scan facilities." Sorry for the dumb questions, I am just so new to this I don't know the difference. -- clu |
AR8200 MK3 opinion
On Sun, 25 Dec 2005 20:08:38 -0500, "DougSlug"
said in rec.radio.scanner: A scanner is, generally speaking, a VHF/UHF receiver that is optimized for quickly scanning preset memories, usually using narrow FM mode or AM mode for air band. The AR8200 is really more of a communications receiver, which is a more flexible unit capable of receiving a wider range of frequencies and modes (such as CW and SSB) with finer control over the tuning step size and other parameters. The AR8200 is also capable of scanning preset memories, of course. Traditionally, comms receivers are more expensive, but now with the digital scanners available, that's not always true. And the AR8200 doesn't do digital and it doesn't track trunked systems. |
AR8200 MK3 opinion
Al Klein wrote:
On Sun, 25 Dec 2005 20:08:38 -0500, "DougSlug" said in rec.radio.scanner: A scanner is, generally speaking, a VHF/UHF receiver that is optimized for quickly scanning preset memories, usually using narrow FM mode or AM mode for air band. The AR8200 is really more of a communications receiver, which is a more flexible unit capable of receiving a wider range of frequencies and modes (such as CW and SSB) with finer control over the tuning step size and other parameters. The AR8200 is also capable of scanning preset memories, of course. Traditionally, comms receivers are more expensive, but now with the digital scanners available, that's not always true. And the AR8200 doesn't do digital and it doesn't track trunked systems. From what I've been reading, these two features appear very important in this day and age. So instead of the AR8200, I am starting to look at the Uniden BR330T. Is that a decent enough one that'll keep me busy and interested in this potential hobby? That's too bad about the AR8200. Too bad it doesn't do digital and track trunked systems. I saw a product that is capable of decoding the digital stuff, called APCO 25 something or another. It was an add-on device. I cannot recall the name of it or model number and can't seem to find the web site anymore. Is it something that can be attached to the AR8200? -- clu |
AR8200 MK3 opinion
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005 18:43:55 -0700, clu said in
rec.radio.scanner: Al Klein wrote: And the AR8200 doesn't do digital and it doesn't track trunked systems. From what I've been reading, these two features appear very important in this day and age. If you have no trunked systems and no digital systems you want to listen to, it's not important - to you. So instead of the AR8200, I am starting to look at the Uniden BR330T. Is that a decent enough one that'll keep me busy and interested in this potential hobby? If you don't need digital. Although it's really a BC246T with Nascar stuff added. (You can program a driver's frequencies, then just hop to that driver. Or something like that. I don't do Nascar. :) ) And the 246 is cheaper. That's too bad about the AR8200. Too bad it doesn't do digital and track trunked systems. I saw a product that is capable of decoding the digital stuff, called APCO 25 something or another. It was an add-on device. I cannot recall the name of it or model number and can't seem to find the web site anymore. Is it something that can be attached to the AR8200? Yes - it's an external box, so the pair isn't exactly hang-on-your-belt portable. And it still won't track trunked systems. But it will, IIRC, do SSB, and goes a lot lower in frequency than most scanners. You have to decide which is more important for the things you want to listen to. It's a highly personal thing. |
AR8200 MK3 opinion
All radio scanners are receivers, but not all receivers are considered
scanners. The AR8200 essentially both, depending on how you define the two terms. A scanner is, generally speaking, a VHF/UHF receiver that is optimized for quickly scanning preset memories, usually using narrow FM mode or AM mode for air band. The AR8200 is really more of a communications receiver, which is a more flexible unit capable of receiving a wider range of frequencies and modes (such as CW and SSB) with finer control over the tuning step size and other parameters. The AR8200 is also capable of scanning preset memories, of course. Traditionally, comms receivers are more expensive, but now with the digital scanners available, that's not always true. - Doug "clu" wrote in message oups.com... What's the difference between a scanner and receiver? One of the key features for the AR8200 MK3 says, "Extensive search & scan facilities." Sorry for the dumb questions, I am just so new to this I don't know the difference. -- clu |
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