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Reviews (4)

21 Sep, 2021
Great for repairing old battery packs!
I bought two of these to rebuild the battery packs for two Azden HTs. You have to remove the plastic shrink wrap and move the circuit breaker from the old pack to the new but that's not difficult. Since the tabs are reversed from the original the positive tab on the pack is very close to the negative terminal on the battery case. Be careful when you solder the positive wire and add insulation between the top of the pack and the bottom of the case top. After that, it's nice to have two radios that work longer than five minutes!

19 May, 2021
Good, but not for beginners.
2 of 2 found this helpful I bought this scanner after believing that my Uniden BC780XLT had lost sensitivity on VHF high band. This scanner exhibits the same problem...on an outdoor antenna. I currently have it on a dual band ham mobile antenna in the shack and it works fine. Apparently the problem is RF overloading from 96.9 Bob FM, located about three air miles away. I have purchased a FM broadcast attenuator and will see how it works.
Now, Whistler has its own buzzwords for the programming. "Object scanning" equals "channels" while "scan lists" equals "channel banks". Once you get past this programming it via computer is straightforward.
It's also advertised as "digital" but is unable to decode amateur radio DMR let alone anything else. I've also programmed two trunking systems into it but haven't been able to get it to scan them. Perhaps in time I'll figure that out.
One feature I'd buy is the ability to silence the tones used to call out fire and EMS departments. I only want to hear the voice, not the obnoxiously loud tones. Strictly speaking of its performance, other than its susceptibility to FM broadcast overloading (I could hear the static being modulated in time with the music on 96.9) its performance is excellent.

11 Jun, 2017
Great for older radios!
I bought a 1973 vintage Realistic Patrolman Pro 3A and this vintage of radio requires a separate antenna for VHF and UHF. Instead of switching antennas back and forth now I can listen to one band at a time. This radio marked the end of the tunable monitor receiver era, and was replaced by crystal-controlled scanning radios. Those gave way to programmable scanners with the introduction of the Bearcat 210.