Radio Shack Pro 95 Users Manual 20 525

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MPC582 PRO-95_200-525_OWNERS_MANUAL_69487

RADIO SHACK--PRO95-User-MANUAL RADIO SHACK--PRO95-User-MANUAL

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2015-01-21

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PRO-95 Dual Trunk-Tracking
Handheld Scanner
20-525

OWNER’S MANUAL — Please read before using this equipment.

! IMPORTANT !
If an icon appears at
the end of a
paragraph, go to the
box on that page with
the corresponding
icon for pertinent
information.
— Warning
 — Caution
! — Important
Ó — Hint
Ô — Note

o

CONTENTS
Features ................. 2
The FCC Wants You
to Know .................. 6
Scanning
Legally ............... 7
Preparation ............ 9
Power Sources .. 9
Using AC
Power ............... 11
Connecting the
Antenna .......... 12
Connecting an
Earphone/
Headphones .... 13
Connecting an
Extension
Speaker ........... 14
Using the Belt
Clip .................. 15
Transferring Data
to and from
Another Scanner or
a PC ................ 15

SCAN

PRI

TEXT

FUNC

MANUAL

ABC

TUNE
ATT

PAUSE

WX

TRUNK

DEF

1

2

3

GHI

JKL

MNO

4

5

6

PQRS

TUV

WXYZ

8

9

7
MODE

DELAY

0
SEARCH

L/OUT

CL
PGM

ENTER

© 2003 RadioShack Corporation.
All Rights Reserved.
RadioShack, RadioShack.com, Hypersearch,
Hyperscan, and Adaptaplug are
trademarks used by
RadioShack Corporation.
Motorola, Smartnet and Privacy Plus
are registered trademarks of Motorola Inc.
EDACS is a registered trademark of GE/Ericsson Inc.

Features

About Your
Scanner ............... 15
About the
Keypad ................. 16
Quick Start ........... 19
Understanding
Banks ................... 19
Channel Storage
Banks .............. 19
Search Banks .. 20
Understanding Your
Scanner's Modes . 20
AM Mode ......... 21
FM Mode ......... 21
Motorola
Mode ............... 21
EDACS Mode .. 23
Open and Closed
Modes ............. 25
Operation ............. 26
Turning on the
Scanner and
Setting
Squelch ........... 26
Storing Known
Frequencies into
Channels ......... 26
Storing Trunking
Frequencies into
Channels ......... 28
Storing Text
Tags ................ 29
Finding and Storing Active
Frequencies .... 32
Listening to the
Weather Band . 39
Using Frequency
Copy ................ 41
Scanning the
Channels ......... 43
Special Features .. 45
Using the Delay
Function .......... 45
Locking Out
Channels or
Frequencies .... 45
Priority ............. 47
Changing the
Receive Mode . 49

2

FEATURES
Your RadioShack Handheld
Scanner is one of a new
generation of scanners designed
to track Motorola Type I and II
(such as Smartnet and Privacy
Plus) and hybrid analog trunking
systems, and GE/Ericsson
(EDACS) type systems, which
are extensively used in many
communication systems.
Trunking communications systems
let a large group of 2-way radio
users (or even different groups of
2-way radio users) efficiently use a
set of frequencies. Instead of
selecting a specific frequency for a
transmission, the user simply
selects a talk group. The trunking
system automatically transmits the
call on the first available
frequency, and also sends a code
that uniquely identifies that
transmission.
Since the trunking system might
send a call and its response on
different frequencies, it is difficult
to listen to trunked
communications using a regular
scanner. The trunking scanner
monitors the data sent with a 2way radio transmission, so you
can hear the call and response for
that user and more easily follow
the conversation.
The scanner also lets you scan
conventional transmissions, and is
preprogrammed with service
search banks for convenience. By
pressing a single button, you can
quickly search those frequencies

This scanner gives you direct
access to over 59,000 frequencies
including those used by police and
fire departments, ambulance
services, government agencies,
air, and amateur radio services.
Your scanner includes these
features:
Simultaneous Trunking
Operation — tracks two trunking
systems (Motorola and EDACS)
and conventional systems at the
same time.
Automatic Channel
Programming — automatically
determines the group trunking
frequencies, for Motorola trunking
systems only, once the control
channels are programmed.
10 Channel-Storage Banks — let
you store 100 channels in each
bank (1,000 channels) to group
channels so calls are easier to
identify.
10 ID-Storage Banks — let you
store 1,000 IDs in 10 ID banks that
have 5 sub-ID banks. 20 IDs are
programmed in each sub-ID bank
and let you easily identify the ID
code.
Weather Alert — automatically
sounds the alarm tone to advise of
hazardous weather conditions
when it detects the alert signal on
the local National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) weather channel during
priority operation.

Using the
Attenuator ....... 50
Turning the Key
Tone On and
Off ................... 51
Using the Display
Backlight ......... 51
Using the
Keylock ........... 52
Changing the
Display
Contrast .......... 53
Cloning the
Programmed
Data ................ 53
Trunking ............... 54
Trunking
Operation ........ 54
Understanding
Trunking .......... 55
Setting Squelch for
the Trunking
Mode ............... 56
Programming
Trunking
Frequencies .... 56
Programming
Motorola Trunking
Systems
(UHF-Lo) ......... 58
Programming
Motorola Trunking
System
(800 MHz) ....... 60
Programming
Fleet Maps ...... 60
Talk Group IDs 62
Storing Talk
Group IDs ........ 62
Talk Group ID
Hold ................. 64
Turning an ID
Sub-Bank
On or Off ......... 65
Locking Out Talk
Group IDs ........ 65
Delay Function in
ID Indication
Mode ............... 66

3

Features

most commonly used by public
service and other agencies.

Features

Reviewing LockedOut Talk Group
IDs ................... 67
Clearing Talk
Group IDs ........ 67
Clearing All Talk
Group IDs in
One Bank ........ 67
Changing the
Open/Closed
Mode ............... 68
A General Guide to
Frequencies ......... 69
US Weather
Frequencies
(in MHz) ........... 69
Ham Radio
Frequencies ..... 69
Birdie
Frequencies ..... 69
Guide to the
Action Bands ........ 71
Typical Band
Usage
(in MHz) ........... 71
Band
Allocation ......... 73
Frequency
Conversion ........... 80
Troubleshooting .... 82
Resetting the
Scanner ........... 83
Initializing the
Scanner ........... 83
Care ..................... 84
Specifications ....... 84
Parts and
Accessories .......... 87

Digital Weather Alert — displays
the weather event text with four
alert levels so you can see and
hear the reason for the alert.
Data Cloning — lets you transfer
the programmed data to another
PRO-95 scanner. You can also
upload or download the
programmed data to or from a PC
using an optional PC interface kit.
12-Character, 4-Line,
Alphanumeric Display — shows
you detailed operating information
clearly.
Triple Conversion
Superheterodyne Receiver —
virtually eliminates any
interference from intermediate
frequency (IF) images, so you
hear only the frequency you
select.
Preprogrammed Frequency
Ranges — lets you search for
transmissions within preset
frequency ranges or within ranges
you set, to reduce search time and
select interesting frequencies
more quickly.
Hyperscan™ and
Hypersearch™ — the scanner
scans at up to 60 channels per
second and searches up to 75
frequencies per second, to help
you quickly find transmissions.
Scan Delay — delays scanning
for about 2 seconds before moving
to another channel in conventional
mode, so you can hear more
replies that are made on the same
channel.

4

Features

Priority Channel — lets you set
the scanner to check one channel
every 2 seconds so you do not
miss transmissions.
Attenuate — lets you program
your scanner to reduce the
scanner's sensitivity to strong local
signals, to reduce interference or
noise caused by these signals.
Text Input — lets you input a text
label for each channel, talk group
ID, bank, or other memory location
so you can easily identify the
transmission.
Lock Out Function — lets you set
your scanner to skip over specified
channels or frequencies when
scanning or searching, and skip
over IDs when tracking trunked
systems.
Key Lock — lets you lock the
scanner's keys to prevent
accidentally changing the
scanner's programming.
Flexible Antenna with BNC
Connector — provides excellent
reception and is designed to help
prevent antenna breakage.
Memory Backup — keeps the
frequencies stored in memory for
an extended time even without
internal batteries.
Three Power Options — let you
power the scanner with internal
batteries (non-rechargeable
batteries or rechargeable
batteries, not supplied). You can
also use an AC adapter (not
supplied) or power the scanner in

5

a vehicle using a DC adapter (not
supplied).
Supplied Trunking Guide —
provides a quick reference to
public safety trunking radio
systems in the United States.
Your scanner can receive these
frequencies:
• 25 – 54 MHz
• 108 – 136.9875 MHz
The FCC Wants You to Know

• 137 – 174 MHz
• 216.0025 – 225 MHz
• 406 – 512 MHz
• 806 – 823.9875 MHz
• 849 – 868.9875 MHz
• 894 – 960 MHz
• 1240 – 1300 MHz
Use “A General Guide to
Frequencies” on Page 69 to help
you target frequency ranges in
your service area so you can
search for a wide variety of
transmissions.

THE FCC WANTS
YOU TO KNOW
This equipment has been tested
and found to comply with the limits
for a scanning receiver, pursuant
to Part 15 of the FCC Rules.
These limits are designed to
provide reasonable protection
against harmful interference in a
residential installation. This
equipment generates, uses and
can radiate radio frequency
energy and, if not installed and
used in accordance with the
6

instructions, may cause harmful
interference to radio
communications.

The FCC Wants You to Know

However, there is no guarantee
that interference will not occur in a
particular installation. If this
equipment does cause harmful
interference to radio or television
reception, which can be
determined by turning the
equipment off and on, the user is
encouraged to try to correct the
interference by one or more of the
following measures:
• Reorient or relocate the
receiving antenna.
• Increase the separation
between the equipment and
receiver.
• Connect the equipment into
an outlet on a circuit different
from that to which the receiver
is connected.
This device complies with Part 15
of the FCC Rules. Operation is
subject to the following two
conditions:
1. This device may not cause
harmful interference.
2. This device must accept any
interference received,
including interference that
may cause undesired
operation.

SCANNING LEGALLY
Your scanner covers frequencies
used by many different groups
including police and fire
departments, ambulance services,
government agencies, private
7

companies, amateur radio
services, military operations,
pager services, and wireline
(telephone and telegraph) service
providers. It is legal to listen to
almost every transmission your
scanner can receive. However,
there are some transmissions you
should never intentionally listen to.
These include:

The FCC Wants You to Know

• Telephone conversations
(cellular, cordless, or other
private means of telephone
signal transmission)
• Pager transmissions
• Any scrambled or encrypted
transmissions
According to the Electronic
Communications Privacy Act
(ECPA), you are subject to fines
and possible imprisonment for
intentionally listening to, using, or
divulging the contents of such a
transmission unless you have the
consent of a party to the
communication (unless such
activity is otherwise illegal).
This scanner has been designed
to prevent reception of illegal
transmissions. This is done to
comply with the legal requirement
that scanners be manufactured so
as to not be easily modifiable to
pick up those transmissions. Do
not open your scanner's case to
make any modifications that could
allow it to pick up transmissions
that are illegal to monitor. Doing so
could subject you to legal
penalties.
We encourage responsible, legal
scanner use.
8

Ô NOTE Ô
•

Connecting an AC
or DC adapter to
the scanner disconnects internal
batteries when you
use the supplied
non-rechargeable
battery holder, but
it does not disconnect internal batteries when you
use the supplied
rechargeable
battery holder.

•

If you install the
rechargeable
battery holder, you
can operate the
scanner and recharge the rechargeable
batteries at the
same time. See
“Using Batteries”
and “Charging
Rechargeable
Batteries” on
Page 11.

•

If the scanner
stops working
properly after
connecting it to
power, try
resetting it. See
“Resetting/
Initializing the
Scanner” on
Page 83.

•

You must charge
rechargeable
batteries before
you use them the
first time. See
“Charging
Rechargeable
Batteries” on
Page 11.

PREPARATION
POWER SOURCES
You can power your scanner from
any of three sources:
• internal non-rechargeable
batteries or rechargeable
batteries (not supplied — see
“Using Batteries”).
• standard AC power (with an
optional AC adapter — see
“Using AC Power” on
Page 11)
• vehicle power (with an
optional DC adapter — see
“Using Vehicle Battery Power”
on Page 12) Ô

Using Batteries
You can power the scanner with
four AA batteries (not supplied).
For the longest operation and best
performance, we recommend
alkaline batteries, available at your
local RadioShack store.
You can use either the supplied
non-rechargeable battery holder
(black), or the supplied
rechargeable battery holder
(yellow). If you use the
rechargeable battery holder, we
recommend RadioShack nickelmetal hydride (Ni–MH) batteries.

Preparation

In some areas, mobile use of this
scanner is unlawful or requires a
permit. Check the laws in your
area.

9

o
o
Never install nonWARNING

rechargeable
batteries in the
rechargeable yellow
battery holder. Nonrechargeable
batteries can get hot
or explode if you try
to recharge them.

 CAUTION 
•

The battery holder
fits only one way.
Do not force it.

•

Use only fresh
batteries of the
required size and
recommended
type.

•

•
Preparation

•

10

Always remove
old or weak
batteries.
Batteries can leak
chemicals that
destroy electronic
circuits.
Do not mix old
and new
batteries, different
types of batteries
(alkaline or
rechargeable), or
rechargeable
batteries of
different
capacities.
If you do not plan
to use the
scanner with
batteries for a
month or longer,
remove the
batteries.
Batteries can leak
chemicals that
can destroy
electronic parts.

You must charge rechargeable
batteries before you use them the
first time. See “Charging
Rechargeable Batteries” on

Page 11.

o

Follow these steps to install the
batteries:
1. Press in on the battery
compartment cover on the
back of the scanner and slide
the cover down to remove it.
2. Pull the battery holder out of
the battery compartment.
3. If you are using nonrechargeable batteries, place
them into the black holder, as
indicated by the polarity
symbols (+ and –) marked on
the holder.
If you are using rechargeable
batteries, place them into the
yellow holder as indicated by
the polarity symbols (+ and –)
marked on the holder.
4. Place the battery holder into
the battery compartment.
5. Replace the cover.
When battery power is low, Low
Battery! appears and the scanner
beeps continuously. When battery
power is depleted, the scanner
turns itself off. Replace all four
non-rechargeable batteries, or
recharge the rechargeable
batteries. See “Charging
Rechargeable Batteries” on

Page 11.

o

Your scanner has a built-in
charging circuit that lets you
charge nickel-metal hydride (NiMH) or nickel cadmium (Ni-CD)
rechargeable batteries (not
supplied) while they are in the
scanner. To charge rechargeable
batteries, connect an appropriate
AC or DC adapter to the PWR DC
9V jack. For best results we
recommend RadioShack
rechargeable nickel-metal hydride
(NiMH) 1600mAh batteries. !
To charge batteries with a DC
adapter from a DC power source,
you must use a 9V, 300 mA DC
adapter such as RadioShack Cat.
No. 273-1810 or 273-1815 and a
size B Adaptaplug™ (neither
supplied). Both are available at
your local RadioShack store.
Make sure the adapter's voltage is
set to 9V. Ô
It takes about 16 hours to
recharge fully discharged
1600mAh NiMH rechargeable
batteries. You can operate the
scanner while recharging the
rechargeable batteries, but
charging takes longer.

USING AC POWER
You can power the scanner using
a 9V, 300 mA AC adapter and a
size B Adaptaplug (neither
supplied). Both are available at
your local RadioShack store.

o

WARNING

o

Always dispose of
old batteries
promptly and
properly. Do not bury
or burn them.

 CAUTION 
If you do not plan to
use the scanner with
batteries for a month
or longer, remove the
batteries. Batteries
can leak chemicals
that can destroy
electronic parts.

Ô NOTE Ô
•

The scanner can
also charge Ni-Cd
batteries. 600mAh
batteries require 6
hours and
850mAh batteries
require 8 hours to
charge.

•

When you charge
Ni-Cd batteries,
do not overcharge
them. Overcharging shortens
battery life.

•

Rechargeable
batteries last
longer and deliver
more power if you
let them fully
discharge once a
month. To do this,
use the scanner
until Low Battery!
appears. Then
fully charge the
rechargeable
batteries.

11

Preparation

Charging Rechargeable
Batteries

 CAUTION 
You
must
use a
Class 2 power
source that
supplies 9V DC
and delivers at
least 300 mA. Its
center tip must be
set to positive and
its plug must fit
the scanner's
PWR DC 9V jack.
Using an adapter
that does not
meet these
specifications
could damage the
scanner or the
adapter.

!

•

Preparation

Always connect
the AC or DC
adapter to the
scanner before
you connect it to
AC power or
power source.
When you finish,
disconnect the
adapter from AC
power or the
power source
before you
disconnect it from
the scanner.

Ô NOTE Ô
If the scanner does
not operate properly
when you connect a
DC adapter, unplug
the DC adapter from
the power source and
clean the socket, or
check the adapter’s
internal fuse.

12

1. Connect the Adaptaplug to
the adapter's cord with the tip
set to positive. 
2. Plug the adapter's barrel plug
into the scanner's PWR DC 9V
jack.
3. Plug the adapter's two-prong
plug into an AC outlet.

Using Vehicle Battery
Power
You can power the scanner from a
vehicle’s 12V power source (such
as cigarette-lighter socket) using a
9V, 300 mA DC adapter and a size
B Adaptaplug™ adapter (neither
supplied). Both are available at
your local RadioShack store. 
1. Connect the Adaptaplug to
the adapter's cord with the tip
set to positive.
2. Plug the adapter's barrel plug
into the scanner's PWR DC 9V
jack.
3. Plug the adapter's cigarettelighter plug into your 12V
power source. Ô

CONNECTING
ANTENNA

THE

To attach the supplied flexible
antenna to the antenna jack on the
top of your scanner, align the slots
around the antenna's connector
with the tabs on the antenna jack.
Press the antenna down over the
jack and turn the antenna's base
clockwise until it locks into place.

Connecting an Optional
Antenna

Always use 50-ohm coaxial cable,
such as RG-58 or RG-8, to
connect an outdoor antenna. For
lengths over 50 feet, use RG-8
low-loss dielectric coaxial cable. If
your antenna's cable does not
have a BNC connector, you will
also need a BNC adapter (not
supplied, available at your local
RadioShack store).
Follow the installation instructions
supplied with the antenna, route
the antenna cable to the scanner,
then connect it to the antenna
jack.

o

o

WARNING

o

Use extreme caution
when installing or
removing an outdoor
antenna. If the
antenna starts to fall,
let it go! It could
contact overhead
power lines. If the
antenna touches a
power line, touching
the antenna, mast,
cable, or guy wires
can cause
electrocution and
death. Call the power
company to remove
the antenna. DO
NOT attempt to do
so yourself.

Preparation

The antenna connector on your
scanner makes it easy to use the
scanner with a variety of
antennas, such as an external
mobile antenna or outdoor base
station antenna. Your local
RadioShack store sells a variety of
antennas.

CONNECTING AN
EARPHONE/HEADPHONES
For private listening, you can plug
an 1/8-inch (3.5 mm) mini-plug
earphone or headphones (not
supplied), available at your local
RadioShack store, into the
jack
on top of your scanner. This
automatically disconnects the
internal speaker.

Listening Safely
To protect your hearing, follow
these guidelines when you use
headphones.

13

! IMPORTANT !

Preparation

The EPA
certified
RBRC®
Battery
Recycling
Seal on the nickelcadmium (Ni-Cd)
battery indicates
RadioShack is
voluntarily
participating in an
industry program to
collect and recycle
these batteries at the
end of their useful
life, when taken out
of service in the
United States or
Canada. The RBRC
program provides a
convenient alternative to placing
used Ni-Cd batteries
into the trash or the
municipal waste
stream, which may
be illegal in your
area. Please call
1-800-THE-SHACK
(1-800-843-7422) for
information on Ni-Cd
battery recycling and
disposal bans/
restrictions in your
area. RadioShack’s
involvement in this
program is part of
the company’s
commitment to
preserving our
environment and
conserving our
natural resources.

Ô NOTE Ô
You must use an
amplified speaker
with this scanner.
Non-amplified
speakers do not
provide sufficient
volume for
comfortable listening.

14

• Set the volume to zero before
putting on the headphones.
With the headphones on,
adjust the volume to a
comfortable level.
• Avoid increasing the volume
once you set it. Over time,
your sensitivity to a volume
level decreases, so volume
levels that do not cause
discomfort might damage
your hearing.
• Avoid or limit listening at high
volume levels. Prolonged
exposure to high volume
levels can cause permanent
hearing loss.

Traffic Safety
Wearing headphones while
operating a motor vehicle or riding
a bicycle can create a traffic
hazard and could be illegal in
some areas.
Even though some headphones
let you hear some outside sounds
when listening at normal volume
levels, they still can present a
traffic hazard. Exercise extreme
caution!

CONNECTING AN
EXTENSION SPEAKER
In a noisy area, an amplified
speaker (not supplied), available
at your local RadioShack store,
might provide more comfortable
listening. Plug the speaker cable's
1/8-inch (3.5 mm) mini-plug into
your scanner's
jack. Ô

USING

THE

BELT CLIP

You can use the belt clip attached
to the back of the scanner for
hands-free carrying when you are
on the go. Slide the belt clip over
your belt or waistband.

TRANSFERRING DATA TO
AND FROM ANOTHER
SCANNER OR A PC
You can transfer the programmed
data to and from another PRO-95
scanner using a connecting cable
which has 1/8-inch phone plugs on
both ends (not supplied). Connect
the cable between each scanner's
PC/IF jacks. See “Cloning the
Programmed Data” on Page 53.
You can also upload or download
the programmed data to or from a
PC using an optional PC interface
cable (available through your local
RadioShack store) and optional
PC interface software (available at
www.radioshack.com).

ABOUT YOUR
SCANNER

About Your Scanner

Once you understand a few simple
terms used in this manual and
familiarize yourself with your
scanner's features, you can put
the scanner to work for you. You
simply determine the type of
communications you want to
receive, then set the scanner to
scan them.
A frequency is the receiving signal
location (expressed in kHz or
MHz). To find active frequencies,
you can use the search function.

15

About the Keypad

You can also search the SEARCH
banks, which are preprogrammed
frequencies in the scanner's
memory (see “Searching a
Preprogrammed Frequency
Range” on Page 32 for the
frequency list). You can even
change the frequency range on
one of the SEARCH banks (SR5)
to limit the search.
When you find a frequency, you
can store it into a programmable
memory location called a channel,
which is grouped with other
channels in a channel-storage
bank. You can then scan the
channel-storage banks to see if
there is activity on the frequencies
stored there. Each time the
scanner finds an active frequency,
it stays on that channel until the
transmission ends.

ABOUT THE
KEYPAD
Here is a brief overview of your
scanner's keys and their functions.
SCAN — scans through the
programmed channels.
FUNC (function) — lets you use
various functions by pressing this
key in combination with other
keys.
MANUAL — stops scanning and

lets you directly enter a channel
number.
WX — scans through the seven
preprogrammed weather
channels.

16

About the Keypad

TRUNK — stores the trunking ID
code or holds the trunking ID while
scanning.
PRI (Priority) — sets and turns the
priority function on or off.
TEXT — lets you input text.
PAUSE — stops search.
MODE — changes the receive

mode (AM, FM, MOT, ED).
/
— turns on/off the
display's backlight, or when used
with FUNC locks/unlocks the
keypad to prevent accidental
entries.
TUNE — lets you input a frequency

and allows you to fine tune a
frequency along with  or .
ATT (Attenuate) — turns
attenuation on to reduce the
scanner's sensitivity and block
extremely strong signals, or turns
it off to increase sensitivity.

 or  — selects the scan or
search direction.
SEARCH — lets you search the six

search banks.
L/OUT (Lock Out) — lets you lock

out a selected channel, skip a
specified frequency during search,
or lock out a selected ID code.
PGM — programs frequencies into

channels.
ENTER — completes the entry of

frequencies and text.

17

1 — enters a 1, or inputs

characters 0 through 9 in text
mode.
About the Keypad

2/ABC — enters a 2, or inputs

characters A, B, or C.
3/DEF — enters a 3, or inputs
characters D, E, or F.
4/GHI — enters a 4, or inputs
characters G, H, or I.
5/JKL — enters a 5, or inputs

characters J, K, or L.
6/MNO — enters a 6, or inputs

characters M, N, or O.
7/PQRS — enters a 7, or inputs

characters P, Q, R, or S.
8/TUV — enters an 8, or inputs
characters T, U, or V.
9/WXYZ — enters a 9, or inputs

characters W, X, Y, or Z.
0 — enters a zero, or inputs

characters ., -, #, _, @, +, *, &, /, ',
$, %, !, ^, (, ), ?, ->, ` or <-.
./DELAY — enters a decimal point

(necessary when programming
frequencies), space, or programs
delay time for the selected
channel/search bank, or hyphen
(in trunking ID setting).
CL — clears an incorrect entry.

18

QUICK START
To help familiarize yourself with
the scanner’s functions, keypad,
and available frequencies, you can
utilize one of these three features
before you begin programming the
scanner.

Quick Start

Preprogrammed Search Banks
— allow you to listen to
frequencies and decide which
frequencies you want to store
when you are ready to program
the scanner. See “Searching a
Preprogrammed Frequency
Range” on Page 32.
Manual Tuning — allows you to
manually scan through the entire
range of available frequencies
without programming. (See
“Specifications” on Page 84 for a
list of the available frequency
ranges.) Also, see “Deleting
Frequencies from Channels” on
Page 44.
Weather Radio — allows you to
listen to NOAA weather
broadcasts without programming.
See “Listening to the Weather
Band” on Page 39.

UNDERSTANDING
BANKS
CHANNEL STORAGE
BANKS
A bank is a storage area for a
group of channels. Channels are
storage areas for frequencies.
Whereas a channel can only
contain one frequency, a bank can
hold numerous channels.
19

To make it easier to identify and
select the channels you want to
listen to, your scanner divides the
channels into 10 banks (0 to 9) of
100 (00 to 99) channels each, a
total of 1,000 channels. You can
use each channel-storage bank to
group frequencies, such as those
used by Motorola trunking,
EDACS trunking, Marine, CB,
Police, Fire, Aircraft and Ham (see
“Typical Band Usage (in MHz)” on
Page 71).

Understanding Your Scanner's Modes

For example, a police department
might use four frequencies, one
for each side of town. You could
program the police frequencies
starting with 000 (the first channel
in bank 0) and program the fire
department frequencies starting
with 100 (the first channel in bank
1). The first digit identifies the
bank (0 to 9). The second and third
digits identify the channel within
the bank (00 to 99).

Ô NOTE Ô
For example, if you
wanted to find active
frequencies between
a range of 150.1000
and 150.5000, you
would put both of
those frequencies in
the limit search bank.

SEARCH BANKS
Your scanner has five
preprogrammed search banks and
one limit search bank. You can set
the lower and higher frequency
limit in the limit search bank.Ô
For the default setting, see
“Searching a Preprogrammed
Frequency Range” on Page 32).

UNDERSTANDING
YOUR SCANNER'S
MODES
You can program each channel
with any of four receive modes
(AM, FM, MOT, and ED).
20

However, you cannot program
MOT (Motorola), or ED (EDACS)
mode in VHF. Each receive mode
affects how your scanner operates
when scanning and receiving
transmissions, and also affects
what transmissions you receive
when you set the scanner to the
closed mode. See “Changing the
Receive Mode” on Page 49. Ô

AM MODE

Ô NOTE Ô
Your scanner’s
closed mode lets you
hear only those talk
groups you specify.
For more information,
see “Open and
Closed Modes” on
Page 25.

Understanding Your Scanner's Modes

The AM mode sets the scanner to
receive transmissions using
amplitude modulation (AM),
primarily used for aircraft, military,
some amateur radio, and some
government transmissions. (Refer
to “Specifications” on Page 84 for
a list of the frequencies covered.)
When the scanner receives a
transmission on a channel set to
the AM mode, it always stops on
the transmission.

FM MODE
The FM mode sets the scanner to
receive transmissions using
frequency modulation (FM), used
for most public safety
transmissions, as well as
broadcast, business, and amateur
radio transmissions. When the
scanner receives a transmission
on a channel set to the FM mode,
it always stops on the
transmission.

MOTOROLA MODE
You can set your scanner so it
decodes the talk group IDs used
with Motorola trunking systems.
This setting is called the Motorola
mode.
21

Motorola systems are trunking
systems used primarily by
business and public safety groups
to efficiently allocate a small
number of frequencies (as few as
five) to many groups of users (as
many as several thousand). To do
this, each group of users in the
system is assigned to a specific
talk group. For example, the east
side patrol officers might all be
assigned to talk group 2160. One
channel in the system is
continuously transmitting data that
identifies which talk groups are
active on which channel. In
addition, this talk group
information is also transmitted as
subaudible data on each active
channel.

Understanding Your Scanner's Modes

When the scanner receives a
transmission on a channel set to
the Motorola mode, it first decodes
the talk group ID data included
with the transmission. In the open
mode, the scanner stops on the
transmission and displays the talk
group ID on the bottom line of the
display. In the closed mode, the
scanner only stops on the
transmission if the talk group ID
matches a talk group ID that you
have stored in the bank's talk
group ID list and have not locked
out.
Motorola trunking systems come
in three categories: Type I, Type II,
and Type I/II Hybrid. Each
category displays and uses talk
group IDs in slightly different
ways.
Motorola Type I IDs are in the form
FFF-SS, where:
22

FFF=Fleet ID
SS=Subfleet ID

Ô

To properly map the raw Type I
data to the correct fleet-subfleet
format, you must program the
correct fleet map into the scanner.
Fleet map information is widely
available on the Internet for most
Type I systems in use.
Type II system talk groups are
identified by a 5-digit number.
Valid talk group IDs are divisible
by 16. If you try to enter an invalid
talk group ID, the scanner rounds
the ID down to the next valid ID.
Type I/II hybrid systems use both
fleet-subfleet and 5-digit formats
for talk group IDs. Ô

Ô NOTE Ô
Motorola Mode
• For example, a
valid fleet-subfleet
ID identifying all
detectives within a
police department
might be 000—12,
where 000
identifies all police
users and 12
identifies the
Detective division.
•

If the scanner
decodes control
channel data while
receiving
transmissions
from a Motorola
trunking system,
CNTRL appears on
the bottom line of
the display.

EDACS MODE
You can set your scanner so it
decodes the talk group IDs used
with EDACS (GE/Ericsson)
trunking systems. This setting is
called the EDACS mode.
EDACS systems are trunking
systems used primarily by
business or private
communications service providers,
as well as by some public safety
organizations. EDACS systems
transmit active talk group
information only on a dedicated
control channel.
EDACS frequencies are organized
in a specific order. Each frequency
23

Understanding Your Scanner's Modes

Type I systems are usually
organized with different user
groups assigned to different fleets.

is assigned a Logical Channel
Number (LCN). For the scanner to
correctly switch to an active
frequency, you must program the
frequencies in LCN order, starting
with Memory 01. EDACS talk group
IDs are entered as a 4-digit
decimal number from 0001 to
2047 or AFS (Agency Fleet
Subfleet) number from 00-001 to
15-157.

Understanding Your Scanner's Modes

When there is activity on an
EDACS system, that information is
sent out on the control channel.
The scanner decodes the ID for
the active talk group. In the open
mode, the scanner then goes to
the transmission and displays the
talk group ID on the bottom line of
the display. In the closed mode,
the scanner only goes to
transmissions with IDs that match
talk group IDs you have stored in
the bank's talk group ID list which
are not locked out.
Because EDACS scanning
requires clear reception of the
control channel at all times,
EDACS systems tend to have a
smaller usable area. An external
antenna can greatly improve
EDACS scanning in a fringe area.
If you are having trouble scanning
an EDACS system, try manually
selecting the data channel. If you
are getting good reception, the
scanner will indicate talk group
CTL—01. Try changing your location
or using an outdoor antenna to
improve reception.

24

Ô NOTE Ô
•

In open mode, you
hear all active talk
groups except
those you
specifically
exclude, making it
easy to hear
everything going
on. In closed
mode, you hear
only those talk
groups you
specify. This
makes it easy to
listen only to talk
groups you are
interested in and
exclude others.

•

When you select a
channel manually,
any transmission
opens squelch,
regardless of the
current mode.

•

When no ID code
is programmed
into the scanner, it
receives the signal
in MOT or ED
mode. In open
mode, the scanner
stops on any
transmission. If
the ID is stored,
the text tag
appears on the
display.
Otherwise, the talk
group ID appears
on the display. In
closed mode, the
scanner only
stops on a
transmission if the
ID is stored.

You can set your scanner to
change the way it receives
signals. These settings, called
open mode and closed mode,
affect how the scanner receives
signals from communications
systems that use some type of
closed squelch (such as Motorola
and EDACS systems). Ô
You can set each of the scanner's
channel storage banks to open or
closed mode.
In open mode, the scanner scans
signals transmitted in all systems.
The scanner stops on any ID code
and only uses the ID list to look up
ID text tags.
In closed mode, the scanner stops
only on signals that have an ID
code which is found in the ID list
for the bank. Also, the scanner
scans signals transmitted only
under the following conditions:
• When the signals are in the
FM mode.
• When the signals are in the
MOT, or ED mode and the
signal's ID code matches the
programmed ID code.
You can also select the user or
talk groups you want the scanner
to receive in closed mode.
When you set a channel storage
bank to open mode, + appears
under the bank's number while
scanning. When you set a channel
storage bank to closed mode, —
appears under the channel

25

Understanding Your Scanner's Modes

OPEN AND CLOSED
MODES

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

•

•
Operation

26

The scanner does
not scan if there
are no frequencies
stored in channels.
If the scanner
does not scan and
you have already
stored frequencies
in channels, turn
SQUELCH further
clockwise.
If the scanner
picks up unwanted, partial, or very
weak transmissions, turn
SQUELCH
clockwise to
decrease the
scanner's sensitivity to these
signals. If you
want to listen to a
weak or distant
station, turn
SQUELCH
counterclockwise.
If SQUELCH is
adjusted so you
always hear a
hissing sound, the
scanner will not
scan properly.
To ensure the
scanner operates
properly while in
the trunking mode,
we suggest you
set SQUELCH
using the steps
listed above.

storage bank's number while
scanning. OPEN or CLOSED appears
while the scanner is in manual
mode or while the scanner is
receiving a signal during scanning.
See “Changing the Open/Closed
Mode” on Page 68 for more
information about setting the open
and closed modes.

OPERATION
TURNING
SCANNER
SQUELCH

ON THE
AND SETTING

1. To turn on the scanner, turn
VOLUME clockwise. Welcome
To Dual Trunking appears. After
about 3 seconds, you might
hear a hissing sound. Then
adjust VOLUME to a comfortable listening level.
2. Turn SQUELCH fully
counterclockwise until the
indicator points to MIN, then
turn SQUELCH clockwise until
the hissing sound stops.
3. To turn off the scanner, turn
VOLUME counterclockwise to
OFF. Ô

STORING KNOWN
FREQUENCIES INTO
CHANNELS
Good references for active
frequencies are RadioShack's
Police Call, Aeronautical
Frequency Directory, and Maritime
Frequency Directory. We update
these directories every year, so be

sure to get a current copy. Also
see the supplied Trunking Guide.

Ô NOTE Ô
•

If you are storing
frequencies for an
EDACS system,
you must store
them in order, with
the first frequency
in channel 1 for
the current bank.
For example, if
you want to store
frequencies of
150.0100,
150.0200,
150.0300, and
150.0400 MHz,
you must store
them in Channels
1, 2, 3, and 4
respectively.

•

When M is on the
display, you can
also select your
desired bank and
channel number
with the FUNC
and arrow keys.

Follow these steps to store
frequencies into channels. Ô
1. Press MANUAL, enter the
bank (0–9) and channel
number (00–99) where you
want to store a frequency,
then press MANUAL again. M
and the bank and channel
number appear at the upper
left corner of the display (for
example: M000).

• Press FUNC. Then press
 or . The bank
number moves in the
direction of the arrow
pressed.
• Press FUNC. Then hold
down  or . The bank
number moves continuously in the assigned
direction.

Operation

• Press . The channel
number moves upward one
by one. Or, press . The
channel number moves
downward one by one.
2. Press PGM. M changes to P.
3. Use the number keys and
./DELAY to enter the fre-

27

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

•

If you made a
mistake in Step 3,
Invalid Freq briefly
appears and the
scanner beeps
when you press
ENTER. Start
again from Step 3.
Your scanner
automatically
rounds the
entered frequency
to the nearest
valid frequency.
For example, if
you enter a
frequency of
151.553, your
scanner accepts it
as 151.550.
After a
transmission, to
have the scanner
pause for 2
seconds on this
channel before
proceeding to the
next active
transmission,
press ./DELAY to
turn the delay
function on. See
“Using the Delay
Function” on
Page 45. The
scanner stores
this setting in the
channel.

quency (including the decimal
point) you want to store.
If you make a mistake, press
CL to delete a single digit or
press and hold CL about 2
seconds to delete all digits.
4. Press ENTER to store the
frequency into the channel.

Ô

5. If necessary, press MODE to
change the receiving mode.
6. If desired, program a text tag
for the channel (see
“Assigning a Text Tag to a
Channel” on Page 29).
7. The next channel in sequence
is ready for programming.
Press PGM and then repeat
steps 3 through 6.

STORING TRUNKING
FREQUENCIES INTO
CHANNELS

1. Press PGM and FUNC then 
or  to select the desired
bank to program.
2. Press TRUNK to enter into
trunking mode.
3. Repeatedly press MODE to
select MOT (Motorola) or ED
(EDACS).

Operation

4. Press PGM and select the
channel number using
 or .
5. Enter the UHF trunking
frequency and press ENTER.

28

6. Repeat Steps 4 and 5 to enter
the other trunking group
frequencies for EDACS or
additional control channel
frequencies for Motorola
systems.
7. If necessary, press MODE to
change the receiving mode.

STORING TEXT TAGS
You can customize your scanner
by storing text tags (up to 12
characters) for easy identification
of channel transmissions, trunk
IDs, or banks.

Assigning a Text Tag to a
Channel
1. Press MANUAL, enter the
channel number where you
want to enter the text, then
press MANUAL again. M and
the bank and channel number
appear at the upper left
corner of the display (for
example: M100).
2. Press PGM. M changes to P.
3. Press TEXT. The cursor
appears at the third line.
4. Enter the text using the
numeral keys (see “Finding
and Storing Active
Frequencies” on Page 32). Ô

Ô NOTE Ô
If you make a mistake, press  or 
to move to the character you want to
change.

Operation

For example, to identify
amateur (ham) radio
transmissions in the 6 meter
range, input “HAM 6m” as
follows:

29

• “H” is the second letter
associated with 4 on the
keypad. Press 4 then 2.
• “A” is the first letter
associated with 2 on the
keypad. Press 2 then 1.
• “M” is the first letter
associated with 6 on the
keypad. Press 6 then 1.
• “Space.” Press ./DELAY.
• “6” is the sixth number
associated with 1 on the
keypad. Press 1 then 6.
• “m” is the first letter
associated with 6 on the
keypad. Press 6 and FUNC
(for the lower case set),
then press 1.
5. Press ENTER to input the text.

Assigning a Text Tag to a
Group ID
1. Press PGM.
2. Press TRUNK.
3. Press FUNC then  or  to
select the desired bank.
4. Press TRUNK to select the
desired sub-bank.
5. Press or hold down  or 
to select the desired group ID.
Operation

6. Press TEXT then enter the tag
using the keypad. (See
“Finding and Storing Active
Frequencies” on Page 32).
7. Press ENTER to store.

30

Assigning a Text Tag to a
Bank
1. Select a channel within the
desired bank by pressing
MANUAL and entering the
bank number (000 for bank 0
or 200 for bank 2, for example).
Press MANUAL again.
2. Press PGM.

Ô NOTE Ô
•

To access the
numbers, after
you press TEXT
(when you assign
the text tag to a
channel) or you
press FUNC and 7
(when you assign
the text tag to a
bank), press 1.
Then press the
desired number
you want to enter.

•

To enter a
lowercase
character or a
character from the
second set for key
0, press FUNC
after pressing the
first numeral key.

4. Press ENTER to store.

Text Input Chart Ô
Press

Character

1

0123456789

2

ABC

2 then FUNC

abc

3

DEF

3 then FUNC

def

4

GHI

4 then FUNC

ghi

5

JKL

5 then FUNC

jkl

6

MNO

6 then FUNC

mno

7

PQRS

7 then FUNC

pqrs

8

TUV

8 then FUNC

tuv

9

WXYZ

9 then FUNC

wxyz

Operation

3. Press FUNC then 7. The
cursor appears at the third
line of the display. Enter the
text using the keypad. (See
“Text Input Chart”).

31

Press

Character

0

.-#_@+*&/
,

0 then FUNC

$ % ! ^ ( ) ? -> ` <-

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

You can use the
scanner's delay
feature while
searching the
search bank. See
“Using the Delay
Function” on
Page 45.
The scanner does
not search lockedout frequencies
while searching
ranges. See
“Locking Out
Channels or
Frequencies” on
Page 45.

/DELAY

space

CL

backspace

FINDING AND STORING
ACTIVE FREQUENCIES
You can search for transmissions
in the scanner’s preprogrammed
search bank. The search bank is
divided into six search bands. You
can change the search range of
Bank SR5 manually by setting the
lower and higher ends of the
search range. Ô

Searching a
Preprogrammed
Frequency Range
The scanner contains these
preprogrammed search ranges,
stored in the search bank
(SR0 – SR5).
Bank

Band

SR0 .......................................... Marine
SR1 ................................................ CB
SR2 ................................... Police/Fire
SR3 .......................................... Aircraft
SR4 ............................................. Ham
SR5 ... Limit search (User changeable)

Operation

Follow these steps to select
preprogrammed search bands and
search them for active
frequencies:
1. Repeatedly press SEARCH to
select your desired search

32

bank (SR0, SR1, SR2, SR3, SR4,
or SR5).

2. In the marine and CB bands,
you can directly select a
channel or search through the
band. When M appears at the
left most position of the
second line, you can directly
select a channel (refer to
“Band Charts” on Page 34).
Press the desired channel
number while M appears to
select it. You can also change
the channels by pressing 
or .
3. Press FUNC then SEARCH
while M appears. M changes
to S and now you can search
through the band. Press
FUNC then SEARCH again to
return to the previous mode.
4. Rotate SQUELCH clockwise
and leave it set to a point just
after the hissing sound stops.
After 2 seconds (if the delay
feature is on), the received
frequency appears and the
scanner starts searching.

Operation

5. When the scanner finds an
active frequency, it stops
searching.

33

Band Charts
Search bank: SR0 Marine band
Receive mode: FM

Operation

34

Channel

Frequency
(MHz)

Channel

Frequency
(MHz)

01

156.050

05

156.250

06

156.3000

07

156.3500

08

156.4000

09

156.4500

10

156.5000

11

156.5500

12

156.6000

13

156.6500

14

156.7000

15

156.7500

16

156.8000

17

156.8500

18

156.9000

19

156.9500

20

157.0000
161.6000

21

157.0500

22

157.1000

23

157.1500

24

157.2000
161.8000

25

157.2500
161.8500

26

157.3000
161.9000

27

157.3500
161.9500

28

157.4000
162.0000

63

156.1750

64

156.2250
160.825

65

156.2750

66

156.3250

67

156.3750

68

156.4250

69

156.4750

70

156.5250

71

156.5750

72

156.6250

73

156.6750

74

156.7250

77

156.8750

78

156.9250

79

156.9750

80

157.0250

81

157.0750

82

157.1250

83

157.1750

84

157.2250
161.8250

85

157.2750
161.8750

86

157.3250
161.9250

87

157.3750
161.9750

88

157.4250

Two frequencies are assigned in one channel in some
Marine frequencies. For example, 157.000 and 161.600
are assigned in Channel 20.
Search bank:
SR1 CB band

Channel

Frequency
(MHz)

Channel

Frequency
(MHz)
26.9750

01

26.9650

02

03

26.9850

04

27.0050

05

27.0150

06

27.0250

07

27.0350

08

27.0550
27.0750

09

27.0650

10

11

27.0850

12

27.1050

13

27.1150

14

27.1250

15

27.1350

16

27.1550
27.1750

17

27.1650

18

19

27.1850

20

27.2050

21

27.2150

22

27.2250

23

27.2550

24

27.2350
27.2650

25

27.2450

26

27

27.2750

28

27.2850

29

27.2950

30

27.3050

31

27.3150

32

27.3250
27.3450

33

27.3350

34

35

27.3550

36

27.3650

37

27.3750

38

27.3850

39

27.3950

40

27.4050

Operation

Receive mode: AM

35

Search bank:
SR2 Police/Fire band
Receive Mode: FM
Group Frequency (MHz)
0

Step
(kHz)

33.420–33.980

20

37.020–37.420

20

39.020–39.980

20

42.020–42.940

20

44.620–45.860

40

45.880
45.900

1

45.940–46.060

40

46.080–46.500

20

153.770–154.130

60

154.145–154.445

15

154.650–154.950

15

155.010–155.370

60

155.415–155.700

15

155.730–156.210

60

158.730–159.210

60

166.250
170.150
2

3
Operation

36

453.0375–
453.9625

12.5

458.0375–
458.9625

12.5

460.0125–
460.6375

12.5

465.0125–
465.6375

12.5

856.2125–
860.9875

25

866.0125–
868.9875

12.5

Search bank:
SR3 Aircraft
Receive mode: AM
Frequency (MHz)

Step
(kHz)

108.000–136.9875

12.5

Search bank:
SR4 Ham band
Receive mode: FM
Group

Frequency (MHz)

Step
(kHz)

0

28.0000–29.7000

5

1

50.0000–54.0000

5

2

144.0000–
148.0000

5

3

222.0000–
225.0000

5

4

420.0000–
450.0000

12.5

5

1240.0000–
1300.0000

6.25

Search bank:
SR5 Programmable limit search
Receive mode:
FM (Default setting)

Searching Active
Frequencies in Your
Desired Frequency Range
Operation

You can program the desired
frequency range for a search.
1. Repeatedly press SEARCH to
select SR5.
2. Press PGM then SEARCH. PSR
(Program Search) appears in
the top line and the cursor
37

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

You can copy and
save a frequency
into a specified
bank, channel, or
priority channel
when the scanner
finds an active
frequency. See
“Using Frequency
Copy” on Page 41
to save the
frequency. The
frequency copy
works only in
search banks 2, 3,
4 and 5.
While the scanner
is searching, you
can use the seek
search by pressing FUNC then 7.
Seek ON appears
on the bottom line.
The scanner stops
at an active
frequency for five
seconds and
restarts searching
automatically. The
scanner repeats
this operation.

blinks L on the second line for
the lower-end limit frequency.
3. Use the number keys and
./DELAY to enter the desired
lower-end limit frequency
(including the decimal point).
4. Press ENTER to set the
frequency. The cursor moves
to H. If the entered frequency
is incorrect, Invalid Freq briefly
appears.
5. Enter your desired higher-end
frequency and press ENTER.
6. Rotate SQUELCH clockwise
and leave it set to a point just
after the hissing sound stops.
7. Press SEARCH to start
searching. When the scanner
finds an active frequency, it
stops searching. Ô
You can set Zeromatic on or off by
pressing FUNC then 0. Press FUNC
then 0 again to reverse the
Zeromatic setting. Whenever this
feature is turned on, Zeromatic ON
briefly appears then z appears at
the first digit of the second line and
the scanner stops at the correct
frequency. When you turn this
feature off, z disappears and the
scanner stops when it detects an
active signal. Zeromatic functions
only in search banks 2, 3, 4 and 5.

Operation

There are several group banks in
SR2 Police/Fire and SR4 ham
bands. You can turn off or on the
groups by pressing the group
numbers. For example to turn off
0, press 0.

38

In the Air and Limit search bands,
press FUNC then press  to start
searching up from the lowest
frequency or press  to start
searching down from the highest
frequency.

Manually Tuning a
Frequency
You can manually set the scanner
to move through all receivable
frequencies, or select a specific
frequency as a starting point.

Ô NOTE Ô
If you press PAUSE
while tuning, the
scanner stops tuning
and ** PAUSED **
appears. Press
PAUSE again, and
the scanner resumes
tuning.

1. Press TUNE. TUNE and the
current frequency appears.
The scanner automatically
begins tuning up or down.
2. Use the number keys to enter
the frequency where you want
the scanner to start.
3. Press ENTER.
4. Press  or  to move up or
down. When the scanner
finds an active frequency, it
stops on the frequency. Ô

LISTENING TO THE
WEATHER BAND

Operation

The FCC (Federal
Communications Commission)
has allocated channels for use by
the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA). Regulatory agencies in
other countries have also
allocated channels for use by their
weather reporting authorities.
NOAA and your local weather
reporting authority broadcast your
local forecast and regional

39

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

Operation

40

The scanner does
not display the
actual area
affected by SAME
messages. It uses
only the message
portion of the
SAME signal
(Warning, Watch,
Statement, or
Test Message).
Your scanner can
also receive
weather alert
tones (see
“Priority” on
Page 47). The
scanner sounds
an alert or beep
when it receives
the SAME code. If
you do not stop
the alert, it sounds
the alert (or beep)
for five minutes.
Then the alert
stops and the
scanner beeps
every ten
seconds. If the
scanner receives
a new message
after five minutes,
it sounds the alert
or beep. To stop
the sound and
ready the scanner
to receive a new
alert signal before
the five minute
time out, press
any key except
.

weather information on one or
more of these channels.

Listening to a Weather
Channel
To hear your local forecast and
regional weather information,
press WX. Your scanner scans
through the weather band then
stops within a few seconds on the
strongest weather broadcast.

Displaying Weather
Messages
The weather service precedes
each weather alert with a digitallyencoded SAME (Specific Area
Message Encoding) signal, then a
1050 Hz tone. You can set the
scanner to decode and display the
SAME message when an alert is
broadcast. Then if you are
monitoring a weather channel with
a digitally-encoded SAME signal
when an alert is broadcast, the
scanner will show the type of alert
being broadcast such as Warning,
Watch, Statement, or Test Message.
The scanner will also sound
alternating alert tones and display
Weather ALERT when the scanner
receives a 1050 Hz tone. Ô
To set the scanner to decode and
display SAME messages, press
FUNC then WX while you listen to
the weather channel. DIG WX STBY
and Cancel: F+WX appear.
To set the scanner out of the
SAME standby mode, press FUNC
then WX. DIG WX STBY disappears.

WX Alert and Beep Tone
Confirmation
1. To test the WX alert, press WX
for more than 2 seconds while
DIG WX STBY appears.
The display indicates the type
of message, and the scanner
sounds an alert or series of
beeps. The beeps automatically change every 3 seconds.
2. Press any key except
stop test sound mode.

to

USING FREQUENCY COPY
You can copy a frequency into a
specified channel, a vacant
channel in a specified bank, or a
priority channel. However, you
cannot copy a frequency from the
Marine and CB search bands.

Copying a Frequency into
a Specified Channel
You can copy a frequency into a
specified channel when the
scanner stops on that frequency
during search mode or manual
tuning.
1. Press FUNC then PGM when
you find a frequency.

Operation

Chan Store? appears on the
bottom line. After about 1
second, the frequency to be
copied flashes on the
indicator.
2. Press the desired bank and
the channel number where
you want to store the
frequency. The display
indicates the bank and
channel number. After about 1
41

second, the frequency to be
copied flashes.
3. Press ENTER. All the
conditions such as receive
mode and delay condition are
copied onto the channel. Chan
Store! briefly appears. The
scanner automatically returns
to search mode.
If you try to copy a frequency
which is already stored, the
scanner sounds the notice
tone 3 times after you press
ENTER. Dupl.f Chxxx appears
at the bottom line. If you want
to copy the duplicate
frequency anyway, press
ENTER, or if not, press CL to
cancel.

Copying a Frequency into
a Vacant Channel in a
Specified Bank
You can copy a frequency into a
vacant channel in a specified bank
when the scanner stops on the
frequency during search or tune
mode.
1. Press FUNC then ENTER
when you find a frequency
you want to copy. Bank9 Store?
appears.

Operation

2. If you want to copy the
frequency into bank 9, press
ENTER. It is stored in the first
available vacant channel in
the bank. Or, press your
desired bank number to store,
then press ENTER. Chan Store!
appears for 2 seconds. All the
conditions such as receiving
mode and delay condition are
42

copied on the channel. After
about 2 seconds, the scanner
automatically returns to
search mode.
3. If you try to copy a frequency
which is already stored, the
scanner sounds the notice
tone 3 times after you press
ENTER. Dupl.f Chxxx appears
at the bottom line. If you want
to copy the duplicate
frequency anyway, press
ENTER, or if not, press CL to
cancel.

Ô NOTE Ô
•

You must store
frequencies into
channels before
the scanner can
scan them. The
scanner does not
scan through
empty channels.

•

To change the
scanning
direction, press
 or .

Copying a Frequency into
the Priority Channel
You can copy a frequency into the
priority channel (see “Priority” on
Page 47) when the scanner stops
on the frequency during Search,
Scan, Manual, Tune, or WX mode.
Press FUNC then PRI when the
frequency is on the display. The
display flashes twice and the
frequency is copied to the priority
channel.

SCANNING
CHANNELS

THE

To begin scanning channels or to
start scanning again after
monitoring a specific channel,
press SCAN. Ô

Operation

The scanner scans through all
channels (except those you have
locked out) in the active banks
(see “Turning Channel-Storage
Banks Off and On” on Page 44
and “Locking Out Channels or
Frequencies” on Page 45).

43

Turning Channel-Storage
Banks Off and On
To turn off banks while scanning,
press the bank's number key so
the bank's number disappears.
For example, to turn off bank 1,
press 1. The scanner does not
scan any of the channels within
the banks you turned off.
Selected for
Scanning in
Open Mode

Bank Off

Selected for
Scanning in
Closed Mode

Ô NOTE Ô
•

You cannot turn
off all banks.
There must be at
least one active
bank.

•

You can manually
select any channel
in a bank, even if
the bank is turned
off.

To turn on banks while scanning,
press the number key until the
bank's number appears. For
example to turn bank 1 on again,
press 1. Ô

Deleting Frequencies from
Channels
1. Press MANUAL.
2. Use the number keys to enter
the channel with the
frequency you want to delete.
3. Press MANUAL again.

Operation

4. Press PGM to enter the program mode. M changes to P.
5. Press FUNC.
6. Press CL. The frequency
number changes and 0.0000
appears.
44

SPECIAL FEATURES
Special Features

USING THE DELAY
FUNCTION
Many conversations might have a
pause of several seconds between
a query and a reply. To avoid
missing a reply, you can program
a 2-second delay into any of your
scanner's channels. Then, when
the scanner stops on the channel,
D appears and the scanner
continues to monitor the channel
for 2 seconds after the
transmission stops before it
resumes scanning or searching.

Ô

To turn delay on or off, press
. /DELAY.

LOCKING OUT
CHANNELS OR
FREQUENCIES
You can scan existing channels or
search frequencies faster by
locking out channels or
frequencies that have a
continuous transmission, such as
a weather channel.

Ô NOTE Ô
Using the Delay
Function
Delay is automatically
set as the default for
each channel when
you turn on the
scanner.
Locking Out
Channels
You can still manually
select locked-out
channels.

Locking Out Channels
To lock out a channel while
scanning, press L/OUT when the
scanner stops on the channel. To
lock out a channel manually,
select the channel then press
L/OUT so L appears. Ô
To remove the lockout from a
channel, manually select the
channel and press L/OUT so L
disappears.

45

Reviewing the Lock-Out
Channels
Special Features

To review all locked out channels,
press MANUAL. Then repeatedly
alternate between pressing FUNC
and then L/OUT to view each
locked-out channel. When you
finish reviewing locked-out
channels, press MANUAL.

Locking Out Frequencies
To lock out a frequency during a
search, press L/OUT when the
scanner stops on that frequency.
The scanner locks out the
frequency, then continues
searching.

Reviewing Locked-Out
Frequencies
To review the frequencies within a
search bank that you locked out:

Ô
Ô NOTE Ô
•

The scanner does
not store locked
out frequencies
during a search.

•

You can lock out
as many as 50
frequencies in
each bank. If you
try to lock out
more, Memory
full! appears.

•

If you lock out all
frequencies in one
search bank and
only this search
bank is activated,

All ranges Locked
out! appears and
the scanner does
not search.

46

1. Press SEARCH to set search
mode.
2. Press FUNC then L/OUT. The
locked-out frequency and
Lockout list appear. Press 
or  to review the list. The
locked-out number and the
total locked-out number also
appear as L/O XX of YY. (The
tenth of thirty locked out
numbers would appear as L/O
10 of 30.) If the search bank
has no locked-out
frequencies, Empty. Lockout
list appears. Press FUNC then
L/OUT again to cancel
reviewing locked-out
frequencies.

Special Features

Clearing a Locked-Out
Frequency
To clear a locked-out frequency,
select that frequency (see
“Reviewing Locked-Out
Frequencies” on Page 46), then
press CL.
If all locked-out frequencies are
cleared within a bank, Empty.
Lockout list appears.

Clearing All Locked-Out
Frequencies in a Search
Bank
1. Press SEARCH.
2. Select the search bank in
which you want to clear all
locked-out frequencies.
3. Press FUNC then press L/OUT.
Lockout list appears.
4. Press FUNC then 6. Confirm

list clear? 1=YES. Press other key
for NO. appears. Press 1 to
clear all locked-out
frequencies. List cleared
appears for about 2 seconds.
Press any key other than 1 to
cancel clear. Ô

PRIORITY
In addition to the 1,000
programmable memory channels,

Ô NOTE Ô
If all frequencies in a
bank you selected
are locked out, you
cannot clear all
locked-out frequencies in that bank at
the same time.

47

the scanner has one priority
channel.
Special Features

With the priority feature, you can
scan through programmed
channels and still not miss an
important or interesting
transmission on a specific
channel. When priority is turned
on, the scanner checks that
channel every 2 seconds, and
stays on the channel if there is
activity until the activity stops. Ô

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

•

The priority
feature does not
operate while the
scanner receives
a trunking voice
channel or during
trunking delay
time. Therefore,
the priority check
seems random
during peak hours.
If you program a
weather channel
as the priority
channel, the
scanner stays in
the priority
channel only when
the scanner
detects the
weather alert tone
This scanner
cannot set a
channel as the
priority channel if
the channel's
receive mode is
MOT or ED.

To program a frequency in the
priority channel:
1. Press MANUAL.
2. Use the number keys to enter
the channel number which
contains the frequency you
want to program as the
priority channel. Then press
MANUAL again.
3. Press FUNC then PRI. Pri
Channel blinks on the bottom
line.
To program the priority channel
directly:
1. Press PGM.
2. Press PRI.
3. Enter the frequency you want
to enter into the priority
channel, then press ENTER.
To program a weather channel as
the priority channel:
1. Press WX.

48

Special Features

2. Select the weather channel
you want to program as the
priority channel.
3. Press FUNC then PRI. Pri
Channel flashes on the bottom
line two times.
To turn on the priority feature,
press PRI so P appears on the top
line while scanning. PRIon (or PRIwx
if you set the priority to a weather
frequency) appears on the bottom
line. If the scanner detects activity
on the priority channel, Pri Channel
appears. Or if the scanner detects
a weather alert tone in Priority WX
mode, Pri Channel appears for 3
seconds then changes to Weather
ALERT and the scanner sounds an
alert tone (see “Displaying
Weather Messages” on Page 40).

Ô

Ô NOTE Ô
•

Priority WX is only
for receiving a
weather alert.

•

When the scanner
detects a 1050 Hz
alert tone, priority
WX activates and
you receive a
weather alert.

•

If you program a
weather frequency
into the priority
channel and the
scanner detects a
weather alert tone
on that frequency,
the scanner
sounds the alert
tone.

To turn off the priority feature,
press PRI.

CHANGING
MODE

THE

RECEIVE

The scanner is preset to the most
common AM or FM receive mode
for each frequency range. The
preset mode is correct in most
cases. However, some amateur
radio transmissions and trunked
systems do not operate in the
preset mode. If you try to listen to
a transmission when the scanner
is not set to the correct receive
mode, the transmission might
sound weak or distorted.
If you want to listen to trunking
transmissions in closed mode, you

49

might have to change the receive
mode.
Special Features

To change the receive mode,
repeatedly press MODE. The
receive mode changes as follows:

AM — accesses the AM mode
FM — accesses the FM mode
MO — accesses the FM Mode,
Motorola Trunking System (with a
4- or 5-digit ID code)

ED — accesses the FM Mode,
EDACS Trunking System (with
4-digit decimal ID code or 5-digit
AFS code) Ô

USING

THE

ATTENUATOR

To reduce interference or noise
caused by strong signals, you can
reduce the scanner's sensitivity to
these signals.

Ô NOTE Ô
MO (MOT) and ED
modes are not
available when the
scanner tunes up or
down through the
frequency ranges in
which the trunking
operation is not used.

There are two attenuator modes in
your scanner. One is normal
attenuator mode in which you set
the attenuator in each channel or
each band/group in the search
and tune mode. The other is global
mode in which you set the
attenuator only once. This setting
is applied all the time in every
mode.
Press ATT to turn on or off the
attenuator while the channel
number is indicated or while the
scanner is searching through
bands/groups. When the
attenuator is on, A appears at the
seventh digit in the top line.

50

Special Features

When you turn it off, A changes to
“.”. You cannot set the attenuator
while the scanner is scanning.
Press FUNC and then ATT to set
the attenuator to its global mode.
Global ATT. appears for 2 seconds
at the bottom line and a or appears. a means the attenuator is
on and - means it is off. Press ATT
to turn the attenuator on or off.
ATTon or ATT— appears on the
bottom line while scanning.
Press FUNC and then ATT again to
turn off the global attenuation
mode. Normal ATT appears on the
bottom line for about 2 seconds.

Ô

TURNING THE KEY TONE
ON AND OFF
Each time you press any of the
scanner's keys, the scanner
sounds a tone. To turn the
scanner's key tone off or on:
1. If the scanner is on, turn
VOLUME OFF/MAX

Ô NOTE Ô
If you turn on the
attenuator, the
scanner might not
receive weak signals.

counterclockwise until it clicks
to turn the scanner off.
2. Turn VOLUME OFF/MAX
clockwise to turn the scanner
on. Welcome To Dual Trunking
appears.
3. While Welcome To Dual Trunking
appears, press 1 to turn on
the key tone or 2 to turn it off.

USING THE DISPLAY
BACKLIGHT
You can turn on the display's
backlight for easy viewing in dimly
51

Special Features

lit areas. Press
to turn on the
backlight for 5 seconds. To turn off
the backlight before it automatically turns off, press
again.
To turn on the backlight so it does
not turn off automatically, hold
down
for about 1 second.
Press
while the backlight is on
to turn it off.
You can select the amount of time
the light stays on. Follow these
steps to change the illuminated
time:
1. If the scanner is on, turn it off
and back on again. Welcome to
Dual Trunking appears.
2. While Welcome to Dual Trunking
appears, press
.
3. Use Up/Down keys to set Lit off
time 5 seconds appears
4. Press  or  to select 3, 5,
10 or 20 seconds then press
ENTER.

USING

THE

KEYLOCK

Once you program your scanner,
you can protect it from accidental
program changes by turning on
the key lock feature. When the
keypad is locked, the only controls
/
,
that operate are FUNC,
SQUELCH, and VOLUME.
You cannot activate the key lock
while you are entering a frequency
into a channel.
To turn on the key lock, press
/
. Key locked.
appears for about 1 second. Key
FUNC then

52

locked. appears when you press
any key after locking the keypad.

CHANGING
CONTRAST

THE

Special Features

To turn off the key lock, press
FUNC then
/
. The scanner
beeps three times and Key unlocked
appears.

DISPLAY

1. Press MANUAL.
2. Press FUNC then 9. Use Up/

Down keys to set contrast.
appears.
3. Press  or  to select the
contrast.
4. Press ENTER to set the
display contrast.

CLONING THE
PROGRAMMED DATA
You can transfer the programmed
data to and from another PRO-95
scanner using an optional
connecting cable with 1/8-inch
phone plugs on both ends (not
supplied, available at your local
RadioShack store). Ô

Ô NOTE Ô
*CLONE MODE*
Incorrect Model
appears if the
scanner receives
data from another
scanner other than a
PRO-95.

Follow these steps to clone the
data.
1. Turn on both scanners.
2. Connect the connecting cable
to each scanner's PC/IF jack.

*CLONE MODE* UP to send,
remove cable to exit. appears.
3. Press . Confirm send data?

1=YES Press other key for NO.
appears.

53

4. Press 1 to send the data to
the other unit or press any
other key to cancel the
operation.
The scanner sends the data. To
exit the clone mode, remove the
cable.

TRUNKING
TRUNKING OPERATION

Trunking

The scanner tracks transmissions
that use the Motorola Type I and
Type II (such as Smartnet and
Privacy Plus) and hybrid analog
trunking systems, plus GE/
Ericsson (EDACS) type systems
extensively used in many
communication systems.
Trunking systems allocate a few
frequencies to many different
users. When the mobile unit
transmits a signal, one frequency
is chosen from among the
allocated frequencies in that
trunking system. The user's ID talk
group is sent with the signal.
To receive trunking signals, you
must store all the trunking control
frequencies for Motorola systems
or all the trunking group
frequencies for EDACS in one
bank (see “Storing Known
Frequencies into Channels” on
Page 26) and input ID codes in the
ID memory (see “Storing Talk
Group IDs” on Page 62).
Your PRO-95 automatically
calculates Motorola voice channel
frequencies when it decodes the
control channel. This eliminates
54

the need to enter all the Motorola
group frequencies.

When the scanner decodes the
Motorola control channel and finds
the voice channel, the scanner
displays the control channel
memory location on the top line,
the received frequency with VC
(voice channel) on the second
line, the bank and control channel
memory location number on the
third line and the Motorola ID
number on the bottom line. !

! IMPORTANT !

To listen to the
transmission, the
mode of the
programmed
channel must be the
same as that of the
trunking channel
(MOT, or ED).

Ô NOTE Ô
•

There might be
more than one talk
group transmitting
at a time in some
Motorola trunking
systems. If you set
the scanner to
manually tune in
Motorola trunking
mode, you will
hear the talk group
on that channel,
but the display will
alternate between
all active IDs.

•

Trunking group
frequencies are
included in the
supplied Trunking
Guide. Frequency
fleet map and talk
group information
are also widely
available on the
Internet, (for
example, at
www.
trunkscanner.
com).

When an ID code is received, the
ID list for the bank is searched,
and if found, the text name stored
for the ID appears. If not found,
scanning resumes immediately
unless the bank is in open trunking
mode. Ô

UNDERSTANDING
TRUNKING
In the past, groups that transmit
frequently, such as police
departments, could transmit on
only a few frequencies. This
resulted in heavy traffic and often
required 2-way radio users to wait
for a specific frequency to clear
before transmitting. Trunked
systems allow more groups of
2-way radio users to use fewer
frequencies. Instead of selecting a

55

Trunking

The control channels are subject
to change depending on the day.
Therefore enter all the control
frequencies in the same bank. If
you do not know which is the
control channel, it is better to enter
all the system frequencies into the
same bank. (Refer to the supplied
Trunking Guide.)

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

Trunking

•

You can scan only
one type of
trunked frequency,
either EDACS or
Motorola in a bank
at one time. You
can, however, mix
conventional
channels and
frequencies in a
bank.
If you are
programming
trunked
frequencies for
Motorola Type I
and hybrid
systems, you must
first program the
fleet map (see
“Programming
Fleet Maps” on
Page 60).
If you are
programming
frequencies for an
EDACS system
you must store
them in the
Logical Channel
Number order
(usually listed as
LCN#). For
example, LCN1
would go into
channel 01 for the
current bank, and
LCN2 would go
into channel 02.

specific frequency to transmit on,
a trunked system chooses one of
several frequencies when the
2-way radio user transmits. The
system automatically transmits the
call on that frequency, and also
sends a code that identifies that
2-way radio user's transmission on
a control channel.
Your scanner lets you easily hear
both the call and response
transmissions for that 2-way radio
user and therefore follow the
conversation. For EDACS and
Motorola (above 406 MHz range),
the scanner monitors the control
channel between each
transmission to identify talk groups.

SETTING SQUELCH FOR
THE TRUNKING MODE
Your scanner automatically mutes
the audio during trunk scanning
when it decodes control channel
data. However, we recommend
you turn SQUELCH clockwise and
leave it set to a point just after the
hissing sound stops. This lets the
scanner quickly acquire the data
channel.

PROGRAMMING
TRUNKING FREQUENCIES
You program trunking frequencies
the same as non-trunked
frequencies, except that you must
store the appropriate mode (MOT
or ED) with each frequency. Ô
Follow these steps to program
trunked frequencies:

56

Ô NOTE Ô
•

To move through
the bank selection
faster, press PGM
then FUNC and
hold down  or
. To move
through the banks
one at a time,
repeat the
sequence of PGM,
FUNC then  or
 until you reach
the desired bank.

•

If you select Not
trunked instead of
MOT, or ED, the
scanner does not
scan trunked
frequencies.
Instead, Not

P000~.. D.+FM
0.00000
Bank 0 Ch 00

2. Press TRUNK to enter the ID
program mode.
3. Repeatedly press MODE to
select MOT for Motorola, or ED
for the EDACS (GE/Ericsson)
system to scan. This sets the
talk group ID decoding
method to be used for the
bank. Ô
Bank 0—0
ID NO. 00
MOT: none

ON

trunked. Press
mode appears.
Bank 0

4. Press PGM to enter the
program mode.

Not trunked
Press mode.

P000~.. D.+FM
0.00000
Bank 0 Ch 00

5. Enter the desired trunking
frequency then press ENTER
to store.
P000~.. D.+FM
866.3875
Bank 0 Ch 00

Frequency

57

Trunking

1. Press PGM and press (or hold
down)  or  to select the
bank. Ô

Ô NOTE Ô

Trunking

Programming
Trunking
Frequencies
• If you enter a
frequency that has
already been
entered, the
scanner sounds
an error tone and
displays Dupl. f
and the channel
number that has
been duplicated. If
the dual entry is
an error press CL
and enter the
correct frequency.
If the dual entry is
intentional press
ENTER to accept.
•

You may replace
any frequency by
selecting the bank
and channel,
pressing PGM and
entering the new
frequency.

Programming
Motorola Trunking
Systems (UHF-Lo)
Base and offset
frequencies vary for
each type of trunking
system. You can get
information about
these frequencies for
the trunking system
you want to scan
using
www.trunkscanner.
com, other Internet
sources, or locallypublished
guidebooks.

58

6. To enter additional trunking
frequencies as subsequent
channels in the same bank,
press PGM or  to access the
next open channel then enter
the frequencies. (See “Storing
Known Frequencies into
Channels” on Page 26).
P001~..

D.+FM

0.00000

Bank 0

Next
channel

Ch 01

7. Press SCAN to start scanning.

Ô

If you make an error in the entry
process, press CL as often as
needed to erase the incorrect
data.

PROGRAMMING
MOTOROLA TRUNKING
SYSTEMS (UHF-LO)
You can program the scanner to
receive transmissions in the UHFLo band (406-512 MHz) of the
Motorola trunking system. You can
receive these transmissions by
checking the trunking system's
control channel. You must
program the system's base
frequency and offset frequency to
do this. Ô
If you try to program an offset
frequency in the UHF-Hi bands
(806-960 MHz), the scanner
ignores the entry.
Follow these steps to program
Motorola trunking frequencies in
the UHF-Lo band:

1. Press PGM then TRUNK to
enter the ID program mode.
2. Press FUNC and press (or
hold)  or  to select the
bank.
3. Press MODE and select MOT.
4. Press FUNC then 2. The
display indicates Base freq.: on
the first line, 406.0000 on the
second line, Offset: 380 on the
third line and Step: 25.0kHz on
the bottom line.
Trunking

5. While B in Base blinks, if
necessary, press the desired
Base frequency with the
number keys and press
ENTER. Confirm the entry. If it
is incorrect, press the number
keys again to set the base
frequency. After you confirm
the input, press ENTER again.
6. While O in Offset blinks, if
necessary, enter the offset
number and press ENTER.
Confirm the entry. If it is
incorrect, then press the
number keys again to set the
frequency. After you confirm
the input, press ENTER again.
7. While S in Step blinks,
repeatedly press  or  to
select the step number, 25.0,
50.0 or 12.5 kHz, then press
ENTER.
8. Press PGM to enter the
program mode. Store the
trunking IDs into the sub-bank
in the same bank.

59

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

On the 800 MHz
trunking band, you
can select a base
frequency (normal
or offset).
On the 900 MHz
trunking band, you
do not need to set
the base
frequency (base,
offset, step).

PROGRAMMING
MOTOROLA TRUNKING
SYSTEM (800 MHZ)
Follow these steps to program 800
MHz band Motorola trunking. Ô
1. Press PGM then TRUNK to
enter the ID program mode.
2. Press FUNC then  or  to
select the desired bank.
3. Press MODE and select
Motorola trunking mode.
4. Press FUNC then 3. Use Up/

Trunking

Down keys to set 800MHz base.
Normal appears.
5. Press  or  to select
Normal or Offset and press
ENTER.
• If you are uncertain about the
base frequency, use the
default setting. The default
setting is Normal.
• If you cannot receive with the
Normal setting, change to
Offset. The base frequency in
Normal is 851.0125 MHz. The
base frequency in Offset is
851.0000 MHz.

PROGRAMMING FLEET
MAPS
You must set the fleet map if you
want to receive a Motorola Type I
system. Fleet maps are included
along with other information about
Motorola Type I systems at
www.trunkscanner.com.
Follow these steps to program a
fleet map.
60

1. Press PGM then TRUNK.
2. For each bank you want to
program, repeatedly press
FUNC. Then  or  to
select the bank.
3. Press FUNC. Then press 8.

Block 0 size code. Use 15 for type
II. S—00 appears.

Block

0

Trunking

4. Enter the size code supplied
with the Type I system
information, referring to the
instruction that appears on
the display. If the information
was not supplied, try the
following common fleet maps.
Size Code
1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

S11

S4

S4

S12

S4

S3

S10

S1
S1

1

S11

S4

S4

—

S4

S10

S10

2

S11

S4

S4

S4

S12

S4

S11

S2

3

S11

S4

S4

S4

—

S4

S4

S2

4

S11

S4

S4

S4

S4

S12

S4

S3

5

S11

S4

S4

S4

S4

—

S4

S3

6

S11

S4

S12

S4

S4

S12

S4

S4

7

S11

S4

—

S4

S4

—

S4

S4

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

0

S4

S0

S4

S0

S3

S4

S4

S3

1

S4

S0

S0

S0

S3

S3

S4

S10

2

S0

S0

S0

S0

S11

S10

S4

S10

3

S0

S0

S0

S0

S4

S4

S11

S11

4

S0

S0

S0

S0

S4

S4

S11

S0

5

S0

S0

S0

S0

S0

S4

S0

S0

6

S0

S4

S0

S0

S0

S12

S12

S12

7

S0

S4

S0

S4

S0

—

—

—

61

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

The default setting
of the bank is for
Motorola Type II.
However, if you
set Type I and you
want to return to
Type II, enter 15
at Step 5.

Trunking

To confirm the
input, repeat
Steps 1–5 and
press ENTER.
Each time you
press ENTER, you
confirm the size
code. If you find
an error, press CL
and begin again at
Step 1.

5. Press ENTER for each entry. If
you make a mistake, press CL
and enter the correct size
code. Ô
6. Press SCAN to start scanning.

TALK GROUP IDS
There are 10 talk group ID banks
and each ID bank has 5 subbanks. Each sub-bank has 20 ID
locations. You can program up to
100 talk group IDs in each bank,
so you can program up to 1,000
talk group IDs in 10 banks. When
the scanner stops on a
transmission in the Motorola, or
EDACS mode, it checks to see if
the ID has been stored. In the
closed mode, the scanner only
stops on the transmission and
displays its text tag if you have
stored and not locked out the ID.
In the open mode, the scanner
always stops on a transmission,
but it displays the ID's text tag if
you have stored the ID.

STORING TALK GROUP
IDS
To store a talk group ID, press
TRUNK when the scanner stops on
a voice channel transmission or
when a talk group ID is indicated
in the manual mode. The bottom
line indicates where the ID was
stored as ID save X—XX and then
changes to ID#XXXX.
The first X in ID save X—XX is the
sub-bank number (0—4) in the
bank. XX is the number of IDs from
(00—19) in each sub-bank.

62

If the ID has already been stored
when you press TRUNK, ID was
saved appears. Ô
Follow these steps to manually
store talk group IDs or to edit a
stored ID.
1. Press PGM.
2. Press TRUNK.

Ô NOTE Ô
When you try to store
more than 100 talk
group IDs in a bank,

Memory full!
appears. Clear some
talk group IDs in
order to store new
ones (see “Clearing
Talk Group IDs” on
Page 67).

Bank 0-0
ID No. 00
MOT: none

Trunking

3. To select the bank where you
want to store the ID,
repeatedly press FUNC then
 or until you reach the
desired bank.

ON
First
location

4. Press MODE to select MOT or
ED.
5. Repeatedly press TRUNK to
select the sub-bank.
6. Press  or  to select the
location where you desire to
store the ID number.
7. Enter the talk group ID and
press ENTER. If necessary,
use the decimal point for a
hyphen.

Bank 0-0
ON
ID No. 00
MOT: 02992
ID# 02292

Group ID
number

63

Ô NOTE Ô
•

•

If you made a
mistake in Step 4,
Invalid ID. appears
and the scanner
beeps when you
press ENTER.
Start again at
Step 3.

Trunking

You can enter
either decimal or
AFS code for ED
(EDACS) ID. The
default setting is
decimal ID entry.
When you press
FUNC then 2, AFS
format appears
for about 2
seconds. Now you
can enter the ID
code with AFS
format.

8. If you want to tag the ID,
press TEXT, enter the desired
text tag for the ID. Then press
ENTER (see “Text Input Chart”
on Page 31).
9. To store the next ID memory
in sequence, press  and
repeat Step 4.

Bank 0-0
ID No. 01
MOT: none

ON
Next
location

10. Press SCAN to start scanning.

Ô

If you entered an ID code that is
already stored in another ID
channel, Dupl ID appears. If you
want to store the ID code, press
ENTER. To cancel the operation,
press CL.

Bank 0-0
ON
ID No. 00
MOT: 02992
Dupl ID 1-12
Duplication

TALK GROUP ID HOLD
You can set your scanner to follow
a trunking signal that you want to
track during scanning. While the
scanner is stopped on a voice
channel (VC appears), hold down
TRUNK until ID hold ON. appears.
When ID hold is activated and the
scanner receives a voice channel,

64

the scan indication S at the first
digit in the top line is changed to H.
To release ID hold, press SCAN or
TRUNK.

TURNING AN ID SUBBANK ON OR OFF
Follow these steps to turn the ID
sub-bank on or off during the
program mode:
1. Press TRUNK repeatedly to
select the desired sub-bank.

Trunking

2. Press FUNC then 1 to turn the
sub-bank on if it is off or off if it
is on.
Follow these steps to turn the ID
sub-bank on or off during the scan
mode:
1. Press FUNC while the scanner
is stopped on a voice channel
transmission.
2. Press TRUNK. The display
indicates which sub-bank is
turned on or off, and the
active sub-bank number
flashes.
3. Press FUNC and the number
of the sub-bank you desire to
turn on or off. For example to
turn sub-bank 4 on or off,
press FUNC. Then 4.

Ô NOTE Ô
You can only lock out
talk group IDs when
the scanner is in the
closed mode (see
“Open and Closed
Modes” on Page 25).

LOCKING OUT TALK
GROUP IDS
1. Press PGM. Ô
2. Press TRUNK.

65

3. Press FUNC,  or  to
move to the desired bank.
4. Press  or  to select the
ID memory.
5. Press L/OUT to lock out the
ID. L appears.
6. To remove the lockout from a
trunking ID, manually select
the ID memory, and press
L/OUT until L disappears.

Trunking

You can confirm the ID code while
the scanner shows the text when
the received signal is a voice
channel.
1. Press TEXT while the scanner
is receiving the voice channel
and indicating the text name.
The ID code appears as
MOT:XXXXXX or ED:XXXX.
2. Press TEXT again to cancel.

Ô NOTE Ô
When activated, ID
delay watches the
control channel
command for the
delay time when the
signal disappears
from the voice
channel.

DELAY FUNCTION IN ID
INDICATION MODE
You can set the ID delay function
separate from the channel delay.
1. Press FUNC then ./DELAY
while you are programming
the trunked ID. Use Up/Down
keys to set ID delay. 2.0 seconds
appears.
2. Press or  to select None,
0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, 3.0, 3.5 or
4.0 seconds.
3. Press ENTER. Ô

66

REVIEWING LOCKED-OUT
TALK GROUP IDS
You cannot clear all lockouts from
a talk group at the same time.
1. Press PGM then TRUNK.
2. Press FUNC. Then L/OUT. The
locked out ID appears. If the
ID memory bank has no
locked-out ID, you hear the
low beep tone.

Trunking

3. Press FUNC then  or  to
select a search bank. Or, just
press  or  to search for
any locked out IDs in a bank.

CLEARING TALK GROUP
IDS
1. Press PGM then TRUNK.
2. Press FUNC,  or  to
select ID memory.
3. Press FUNC then CL.

CLEARING ALL TALK
GROUP IDS IN ONE
BANK
You can clear all talk group IDs
within a bank. This lets you quickly
delete all talk group IDs from a
bank if you want to use the bank to
store different data (such as a new
set of talk group IDs).
1. Press PGM.
2. Press TRUNK to enter a talk
group ID memory mode.
3. Select a talk group ID bank
using FUNC,  or .

67

4. Press FUNC then 6. Confirm

list clear? 1=YES Press other key
for NO. appears.
5. Press 1 to clear all talk group
IDs within a bank. List cleared
appears.
To cancel the deletion, press any
key except 1. The scanner returns
to the talk group ID memory mode.

CHANGING THE
OPEN/CLOSED MODE
1. Press MANUAL.
Trunking

2. Press FUNC then  or  to
select the channel storage
bank.
3. Press FUNC then 5. Bank OPEN.
or Bank CLOSED. appears. After
that message disappears, the
tenth digit on the top line of
the display changes from + to
— or vice versa.

4. Repeat Steps 2 and 3 for
each bank.

68

A GENERAL GUIDE
TO FREQUENCIES
Reception of the frequencies
covered by your scanner is mainly
“line-of-sight.” That means you
usually cannot hear stations that
are beyond the horizon.

US WEATHER
FREQUENCIES
(IN MHZ)
162.400 162.425 162.450
162.475 162.500 162.525
162.550

HAM RADIO
FREQUENCIES

Wavelength

A General Guide to Frequencies

Ham radio operators often
transmit emergency information
when other means of
communication break down. The
chart below shows the frequencies
the scanner receives that ham
radio operators normally use.
Frequencies
(MHz)

10-Meter

28.000–29.700

6-Meter

50.000–54.000

2-Meter

144.000–148.000

70-cm

420.000–450.000

33-cm

902.000–928.000

25-cm

1240.000–
1300.000

BIRDIE FREQUENCIES
Every scanner has birdie
frequencies. Birdies are signals
created inside the scanner's
69

receiver. These operating
frequencies might interfere with
transmissions on the same
frequencies. If you program one of
these frequencies, you hear only
noise on that frequency. If the
interference is not severe, you
might be able to turn SQUELCH
clockwise to omit the birdie.
The scanner’s birdie frequencies
(in MHz) are::
UHF Low Band (MHz)
408.0000

420.7500

446.2500

459.0000

433.5000
471.7500

482.30625

484.5000

497.2500

510.0000
VHF High Band (MHz)

A General Guide to Frequencies

114.7500

116.7375

121.1250

123.9750

119.8125
124.2000

125.9500

126.8250

126.9000

126.9750

127.0500

127.5000
132.1000

129.0250

129.1500

134.7625

135.6750

137.7000

140.2500

140.3850

146.0050

168.9800
VHF Low Band (MHz)
25.5000

38.2500

41.8900

51.000
UHF High Band (MHz)
812.7000

816.0750

867.20625

930.64375 1246.1750

852.96875

1246.2500

1268.7750 1246.2500

To find the birdies in your scanner,
begin by disconnecting the
70

antenna and moving it away from
the scanner. Make sure that no
other nearby radio or TV sets are
turned on near the scanner. Use
the search function and scan
every frequency range from its
lowest frequency to the highest.
Occasionally, the searching will
stop as if it had found a signal,
often without any sound. This is a
birdie. Make a list of all the birdies
in your scanner for future
reference.

GUIDE TO THE
ACTION BANDS
TYPICAL BAND USAGE
(IN MHZ)
HF Band
HF Range

25.000–26.960

Citizen’s Band

26.965–27.405

10-Meter
Amateur

28.000–29.700

Low Range

29.700–50.000

6-Meter
Amateur

50.000–54.000

2-Meter
Amateur

144.000–148.000

High Range

148.000–174.000

New Mobile
Narrow Band

220.000–222.000

11/4-Meter
Amateur

222.000–225.000

Guide to the Action Bands

VHF Band

71

UHF Band
U.S.
Government

406.000–420.000

70-cm
Amateur

420.000–450.000

Low Range

450.000–470.000

FM-TV Audio
Broadcast,
Wide Band

470.000–512.000

800 band Law
Enforcement

806.000–824.000

Conventional
Systems

851.000–856.000

Conventional/
Trunked
Systems

856.000–861.000

Public Safety

866.000–869.000

Trunked
Private/
General

894.000–960.000

25-cm
Amateur

1240.000–1300.000

PRIMARY USAGE
As a general rule, most of the
radio activity is concentrated on
the following frequencies:
VHF Band

Guide to the Action Bands

72

Activities

Frequencies (MHz)

2-Meter
Amateur
Band

144.000 – 148.000

Government,
Police, and
Fire

153.785 – 155.980

Emergency
Services

158.730 – 159.460

Railroad

160.000 – 161.900

UHF Band
Activities

Frequencies (MHz)

70Centimeter
Amateur
Band

420.000 – 450.000

FM
Repeaters
Land-Mobile
“Paired”
Frequencies

450.000 – 470.000

Base Stations

451.025 – 454.950

Mobile Units

456.025 – 459.950

Repeater
Units

460.025 – 464.975

Control
Stations Ô

465.025– 469.975

BAND ALLOCATION
To help decide which frequency
ranges to scan, use the following
listing of the typical services that
use the frequencies your scanner
receives. These frequencies are
subject to change, and might vary
from area to area. For a more
complete listing, including Fire and
Emergency Services, refer to
Police Call Radio Guide available
at your local RadioShack store.
Service

AIR

Aircraft

BIFC

Boise (ID)
Interagency Fire
Cache

BUS

Business

CAP

Civil Air Patrol

CCA

Common Carrier

CSB

Conventional
Systems

CTSB

Conventional/
Trunked Systems

Guide to the Action Bands

Abbreviation

Ô NOTE Ô
Remote control
stations and mobile
units operate at 5
MHz higher than their
associated base
stations and relay
repeater units.

73

Abbreviation

Service

FIRE

Fire Department

HAM

Amateur (Ham)
Radio

GOVT

Federal Government

GMR

General Mobile
Radio

GTR

General Trunked

IND

Industrial Services
(Manufacturing,
Construction,
Farming, Forest
Products)

MAR
MARI

Military Amateur
Radio
Maritime Limited
Coast
(Coast Guard,
Marine Telephone,
Shipboard Radio,
Private Stations)

MARS

Military Affiliate
Radio System

MED

Emergency/Medical
Services

Guide to the Action Bands

MIL

U.S. Military

MOV

Motion Picture/Video
Industry

NEW

New Mobile Narrow

NEWS

Relay Press
(Newspaper
Reporters)

OIL

Oil/Petroleum
Industry

POL

Police Department

PUB

Public Services
(Public Safety, Local
Government,
Forestry
Conservation)

74

PSB

Public Safety

PTR

Private Trunked

Abbreviation

Service

ROAD

Road & Highway
Maintenance

RTV

Radio/TV Remote
Broadcast Pickup

TAXI

Taxi Services

TELM

Telephone
Maintenance

TOW

Tow Trucks

TRAN

Transportation
Services
(Trucks, Tow Trucks,
Buses, Railroad,
Other)

TSB

Trunked Systems

TVN

FM-TV Audio
Broadcast

USXX

Government
Classified

UTIL

Power & Water
Utilities

WTHR

Weather

HIGH FREQUENCY (HF) —
(3 MHz-30 MHz)
CB Band
(26.965-27.405 MHz)
10-Meter Amateur Band
(28.0-29.7 MHz)
28.000-29.700 ............................ HAM

Guide to the Action Bands

VERY HIGH FREQUENCY (VHF)
— (30 MHz-300 MHz)
VHF Low Band
(29.7-50 MHz-in 5 kHz steps)
29.700-29.790................................ IND
29.900-30.550.................... GOVT, MIL
30.580-31.980...................... IND, PUB
32.000-32.990.................... GOVT, MIL
33.020-33.980............. BUS, IND, PUB
34.010-34.990.................... GOVT, MIL

75

35.020-35.980........... BUS, PUB, IND,
................................................... TELM
36.000-36.230.................... GOVT, MIL
36.230-36.990...........Oil Spill Cleanup,
........................................... GOVT, MIL
37.020-37.980...................... PUB, IND
38.000-39.000.................... GOVT, MIL
39.020-39.980...............................PUB
40.000-42.000......... GOVT, MIL, MARI
42.020-42.940...............................POL
42.960-43.180................................IND
43.220-43.680...........TELM, IND, PUB
43.700-44.600............................ TRAN
44.620-46.580..................... POL, PUB
46.600-46.990............................GOVT
47.020-47.400...............................PUB
47.420 .................American Red Cross
47.440-49.580...................... IND, PUB
49.610-49.990................................ MIL

6-Meter Amateur Band
(50-54 MHz)
50.00-54.00.................................. HAM

Aircraft Band (108-136 MHz)
108.000-121.490............................ AIR
121.500 .......................AIR Emergency
121.510-136.000............................ AIR

U.S. Government Band
(137-144 MHz)
137.000-144.000................ GOVT, MIL

2-Meter Amateur Band
(144-148 MHz)
144.000-148.000.......................... HAM

VHF High Band (148-174 MHz)
Guide to the Action Bands

148.050-150.345......... CAP, MAR, MIL
150.775-150.790.......................... MED
150.815-150.980......................... TOW,
...................................Oil Spill Cleanup
150.995-151.475.............. ROAD, POL
151.490-151.955.................. IND, BUS
151.985 ...................................... TELM
152.0075 ...................................... MED
152.270-152.480.........IND, TAXI, BUS

76

Guide to the Action Bands

152.870-153.020..................IND, MOV
153.035-153.725.......... IND, OIL, UTIL
153.740-154.445................ PUB, FIRE
154.490-154.570.................. IND, BUS
154.585......................Oil Spill Cleanup
154.600-154.625...........................BUS
154.655-156.240.............MED, ROAD,
............................................ POL, PUB
156.255-157.425................. OIL, MARI
157.450....................................... MED
157.470-157.515......................... TOW
157.530-157.725.................. IND, TAXI
157.740.........................................BUS
158.130-158.460..........BUS, IND, OIL,
..........................................TELM, UTIL
158.730-159.465..... POL, PUB, ROAD
159.480.......................................... OIL
159.495-161.565........................ TRAN
161.580-162.000........ OIL, MARI, RTV
162.0125-162.35.... GOVT, MIL, USXX
162.400-162.550....................... WTHR
162.5625-162.6375........... GOVT, MIL,
................................................... USXX
162.6625...................................... MED
162.6875-163.225............. GOVT, MIL,
................................................... USXX
163.250........................................ MED
163.275-166.225............... GOVT, MIL,
................................................... USXX
166.250................... GOVT, RTV, FIRE
166.275-169.400.............. GOVT, BIFC
169.445-169.505........ Wireless Mikes,
................................................... GOVT
169.55-169.9875... GOVT, MIL, USXX
170.000-170.150... BIFC, GOVT, RTV,
..................................................... FIRE
170.175-170.225....................... GOVT
170.245-170.305......... Wireless Mikes
170.350-170.400............... GOVT, MIL
170.425-170.450......................... BIFC
170.475........................................ PUB
170.4875-173.175........... GOVT, PUB,
..................................... Wireless Mikes
173.225-173.5375.......... MOV, NEWS,
............................................. UTIL, MIL
173.5625-173.5875........................ MIL
........................... Medical/Crash Crews
173.60-173.9875........................ GOVT

77

ULTRA HIGH FREQUENCY
(UHF) — (300 MHz-3 GHz)
U. S. Government Band (406-420
MHz)
406.125-419.975........... GOVT, USXX

70-Centimeter Amateur Band
(420-450 MHz)
420.000-450.000......................... HAM

Low Band (450-470 MHz)
450.050-450.925.......................... RTV
451.025-452.025...... IND, OIL, TELM,
..................................................... UTIL
452.0375-453.00................ IND, TAXI,
............................. TRAN TOW, NEWS
453.0125-454.000................ PUB, OIL
455.050-455.925.......................... RTV
457.525-457.600.......................... BUS
458.025-458.175......................... MED
460.0125-460.6375.. FIRE, POL, PUB
460.650-462.175.......................... BUS
462.1875-462.450............... BUS, IND
462.4625-462.525.... IND, OIL, TELM,
..................................................... UTIL
462.550-462.925............... GMR, BUS
462.9375-463.1875..................... MED
463.200-467.925.......................... BUS

Ô NOTE Ô
Some cities use the
470-512 MHz band
for land/mobile
service.

FM-TV Audio Broadcast, UHF
Wide Band (470-512 MHz) Ô
(Channels 14 through 20 in 6 MHz
steps)

Guide to the Action Bands

475.750 ............................. Channel 14
481.750 ............................. Channel 15
487.750 ............................. Channel 16
493.750 ............................. Channel 17
499.750 ............................. Channel 18
505.750 ............................. Channel 19
511.750 ............................. Channel 20

78

Conventional Systems Band —
Locally Assigned (in 6.25 kHz
steps)
Frequency Range

Service

851.0125–855.9875 MHz

CSB

Conventional/Trunked Systems
Band —
Locally Assigned
(in 6.25 kHz steps)
Frequency Range

Service

856.0125–860.9875 MHz

CTSB

Trunked Systems Band —
Locally Assigned
(in 6.25 kHz steps)
Frequency Range

Service

861.0125–865.9875 MHz

TSB

Public Safety Band —
Locally Assigned
(in 6.25 kHz steps)
Frequency Range

Service

866.0125–868.9875 MHz

PSB

Frequency Range

Service

902.000–928.000

HAM

Guide to the Action Bands

33-Centimeter Amateur Band
(902-928 MHz in 6.25 kHz steps)

79

Private Trunked Band (in 6.25 kHz
steps)
Frequency Conversion

Frequency Range

Service

935.0125–939.9875 MHz

PTR

General Trunked Band (in 6.25
kHz steps)
Frequency Range

Service

940.0125–940.9875 MHz

GTR

23-Centimeter Amateur Band (in
6.25 kHz steps)
Frequency Range

Service

1240.000–1300.000 MHz

HAM

FREQUENCY
CONVERSION
The tuning location of a station
can be expressed in frequency
(kHz or MHz) or in wavelength
(meters). The following
information can help you make the
necessary conversions.
1 MHz (million) =
1,000 kHz (thousand)
To convert MHz to kHz, multiply
the number of megahertz by
1,000:
30.62 (MHz) x 1,000 = 30,620 kHz

80

Frequency Conversion

To convert from kHz to MHz,
divide the number of kilohertz by
1,000:
127.800 (kHz) / 1,000 = 127.8
MHz
To convert MHz to meters, divide
300 by the number of megahertz:
300/50 MHz = 6 meters

81

TROUBLESHOOTING
Problem
Scanner is
totally
inoperative.

Poor or no
reception.

Possible Cause

Troubleshooting

The AC or DC
adapter is not
connected.

Be sure the adapter's
barrel plug is fully
inserted into the PWR
DC 9V jack.

Batteries have failed

Recharge the
rechargeable batteries
or replace the standard batteries

An antenna is not
connected or is
connected
incorrectly.

Be sure an antenna is
properly connected to
the scanner.

Programmed
frequencies are the
same as “birdie”
frequencies.

Avoid programming
frequencies listed
under “Birdie
Frequencies” on
Page 69 or only listen
to them manually.

The keypad
Keylock is turned on.
does not work. The scanner might
need to be reset or
initialized.

The scanner is SQUELCH is not
on but will not correctly adjusted.
scan.

During
scanning, the
scanner locks
on frequencies
that have an
unclear
transmission.

82

Remedy

Turn off keylock.
Turn the scanner off
then on again, or reset/
initialize the scanner
(see “Resetting/
Initializing the Scanner”
on Page 83).
Turn SQUELCH
clockwise.

Only one channel or
no channels are
stored.

Store frequencies into
more than one
channel.

Programmed
frequencies are the
same as “birdie”
frequencies.

Avoid programming
frequencies listed
under “Birdie
Frequencies” on
Page 69, or only listen
to them manually.

RESETTING/
INITIALIZING THE
SCANNER

RESETTING

THE

SCANNER

1. Turn off the scanner, then turn
it on again.
2. Insert a pointed object, such
as a straightened paper clip,
into the reset opening on the
side of the scanner. Then
gently press and release the
reset button inside the
opening.
Pressing the reset button does not
clear the scanner's memory.

INITIALIZING
SCANNER

THE

1. Turn off the scanner, then turn
it on again. Welcome To Dual
Trunking appears. !
2. Press 0 then 1 while Welcome
To Dual Trunking appears.
Initializing Please Wait. appears
for about 2 seconds.

•

You can save the
information in
your scanner’s
memory into your
computer or
another scanner
before trying to
initialize it. See
“Transferring
Data to and from
Another Scanner
or a PC” on
Page 15.

Initializing the
Scanner
This procedure
clears all information
you stored in the
scanner's memory.
Initialize the scanner
only when you are
sure the scanner is
not working properly.

Do not turn off the scanner until
the initialization is complete. When
the initialization is complete M000
appears on the top line of the
display. Bank 0 Ch 00 appears on
the bottom line.

83

Resetting/Initializing the Scanner

If the scanner's display locks up or
does not work properly after you
connect a power source, you
might need to reset or initialize it. !

! IMPORTANT !
Resetting/
Initializing the
Scanner
• If you have
problems with the
scanner, first try
to reset it to retain
all memory. If that
does not work,
you can initialize
the scanner.

CARE
Keep the scanner dry; if it gets
wet, wipe it dry immediately. Use
and store the scanner only in
normal temperature environments.
Handle the scanner carefully; do
not drop it. Keep the scanner away
from dust and dirt, and wipe it with
a damp cloth occasionally to keep
it looking new.
Modifying or tampering with the
scanner’s internal components
can cause a malfunction and
might invalidate its warranty and
void your FCC authorization to
operate it. If your scanner is not
performing as it should, take it to
your local RadioShack store for
assistance.

SPECIFICATIONS
Frequency Coverage (MHz)
25–54 ........................ (in 5 kHz steps)
108–136.9875 ....... (in 12.5 kHz steps)
137–174 ............ (in 5, 6.25, or 7.5 kHz
steps)
216.0025–221.9975 .. (in 5 kHz steps)
220.0000–225.0000 .. (in 5 kHz steps)
406–512 ................. (in 6.25 kHz steps)
806–823.9875 ........ (in 6.25 kHz steps)
849–868.9875 ........ (in 6.25 kHz steps)
894–960 ................. (in 6.25 kHz steps)
1240–1300 ............ (in 6.25 kHz steps)
Memory channels....................... 1,000
Care

Channel memory banks .................. 10
Number of memory channels per bank
100
Talk group ID memories .............. 1,000

84

ID memory banks............................ 10
Sub-banks per bank.......................... 5
Number of memory IDs per sub-bank
........................................................ 20
Sensitivity (20 dB S/N):
FM:
25–54 MHz .............................. 0.3 µV
108 –136.9875 MHz ................. 0.3 µV
137–174 MHz ........................... 0.5 µV
216–225 MHz ........................... 0.5 µV
406–512 MHz ........................... 0.5 µV
806–960 MHz ........................... 0.7 µV
1240–1300 MHz ....................... 0.7 µV
AM:
25–54 MHz .................................. 1 µV
108–136.9875 MHz ..................... 1 µV
137–174 MHz ........................... 1.5 µV
216–225 MHz ........................... 1.5 µV
406–512 MHz .............................. 2 µV
806–960 MHz ............................. 2 µV
1240–1300 MHz ......................... 3 µV
Selectivity:
25 – 27.995 MHz at AM mode
-6 dB ...................................... +/-5 kHz
-50 dB .................................... +/-6 kHz
All frequencies except 25 - 27.995
MHz at AM and FM mode
-6 dB .................................... +/-10 kHz
-50 dB .................................. +/-18 kHz

Specifications

Spurious Rejection (at 154.1 MHz FM)
40 dB
Scanning Rate ..... Up to 60 Channels
per Second
Search Rate................ Up to 75 Steps
per Second
Delay Time.......................... 2 seconds

85

Intermediate Frequencies (IF):
1st .................................... 380.8 MHz
2nd ...................................... 21.4 MHz
3rd.......................................... 455 kHz
Priority Sampling................. 2 seconds
Operating Temperature ... -14 to 140° F
(-10 to 60° C)
IF Rejection
380.8 MHz at 154.1 MHz ........ 60 dB
21.4 MHz at 154.1 MHz ........ 100 dB
Squelch Sensitivity:
Threshold (FM and AM) ............ 0.5µV
Tight (FM) ................................. 25 dB
Tight (AM) ................................. 20 dB
Antenna Impedance............. 50 Ohms
Audio Output Power (10% THD)
.............................................. 170 mW
Built-in Speaker... 13/8 Inches (36 mm)
....................... (8-ohm, Dynamic Type)
Power Requirements:
Batteries......... 4 AA Alkaline Batteries
or 4 AA Rechargeable
Ni-MH Batteries
External Power......................... 9V DC
Current Drain (Squelched) ....... 90 mA
Battery Charge Current.......... 150 mA
Dimensions (HWD) ..... 6 3/16 × 2 7/16 ×
1 3/4 Inches (157 × 62 × 41 mm)
Weight (without antenna and batteries)
8.5 oz.(240 g)

Specifications

Specifications are typical: individual
units might vary. Specifications are
subject to change and improvement
without notice.

86

Parts and Accessories

PARTS AND
ACCESSORIES
Parts and accessories are
available at your local RadioShack
store. Accessories are also
available online at
www.radioshack.com. Parts and
accessories are available but not
limited to the following. Visit your
local RadioShack store or obtain a
RadioShack catalog for a more
complete listing of available
accessories.
External
Antenna
Connect to your
scanner’s
external antenna
jack for great
reception of
signals on many
frequencies.
800 MHz Antenna
Connect to your scanner’s
external antenna jack for crisp,
clear reception of 800 MHz
signals.
RG-8/RG-58
50-Ohm
Coaxial Cable
Use to connect your scanner to
an external antenna.

87

Connecting Cable
Parts and Accessories

Use to connect
your scanner
to another
scanner so you
can transfer
data between
them.
PC Interface Cable
Use to connect your scanner to
a PC so you can transfer data
between them.
9V, 300 mA
AC Adapter
UNKING

DUAL TR

Use to connect
your scanner
to AC power.

88

NNELS

1000 CHA

Notes

NOTES

89

Notes

90

91
Notes

Limited One-Year Warranty
This product is warranted by RadioShack against manufacturing defects in material and workmanship under normal use for one (1) year
from the date of purchase from RadioShack company-owned stores
and authorized RadioShack franchisees and dealers. EXCEPT AS
PROVIDED HEREIN, RadioShack MAKES NO EXPRESS WARRANTIES AND ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING THOSE OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, ARE LIMITED IN DURATION TO THE DURATION OF THE
WRITTEN LIMITED WARRANTIES CONTAINED HEREIN. EXCEPT
AS PROVIDED HEREIN, RadioShack SHALL HAVE NO LIABILITY
OR RESPONSIBILITY TO CUSTOMER OR ANY OTHER PERSON
OR ENTITY WITH RESPECT TO ANY LIABILITY, LOSS OR DAMAGE CAUSED DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY BY USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THE PRODUCT OR ARISING OUT OF ANY BREACH
OF THIS WARRANTY, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, ANY
DAMAGES RESULTING FROM INCONVENIENCE, LOSS OF TIME,
DATA, PROPERTY, REVENUE, OR PROFIT OR ANY INDIRECT,
SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, EVEN
IF RadioShack HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
SUCH DAMAGES.
Some states do not allow limitations on how long an implied warranty
lasts or the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, so the above limitations or exclusions may not apply to you.
In the event of a product defect during the warranty period, take the
product and the RadioShack sales receipt as proof of purchase date
to any RadioShack store. RadioShack will, at its option, unless otherwise provided by law: (a) correct the defect by product repair without
charge for parts and labor; (b) replace the product with one of the
same or similar design; or (c) refund the purchase price. All replaced
parts and products, and products on which a refund is made, become
the property of RadioShack. New or reconditioned parts and products
may be used in the performance of warranty service. Repaired or replaced parts and products are warranted for the remainder of the original warranty period. You will be charged for repair or replacement of
the product made after the expiration of the warranty period.
This warranty does not cover: (a) damage or failure caused by or attributable to acts of God, abuse, accident, misuse, improper or abnormal usage, failure to follow instructions, improper installation or
maintenance, alteration, lightning or other incidence of excess voltage
or current; (b) any repairs other than those provided by a RadioShack
Authorized Service Facility; (c) consumables such as fuses or batteries; (d) cosmetic damage; (e) transportation, shipping or insurance
costs; or (f) costs of product removal, installation, set-up service adjustment or reinstallation.
This warranty gives you specific legal rights, and you may also have
other rights which vary from state to state.
RadioShack Customer Relations, 200 Taylor Street, 6th Floor,
Fort Worth, TX 76102
12/99

RadioShack Corporation
Fort Worth, Texas 76102

20-525
GE-02D-6982
01A03
Printed in China



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