Basic desktop scanner for Bloomington, Indiana?

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Sherrikat

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Bloomington, Indiana
Hi, all -

So, I jumped the gun and bought an analog Whistler 1025 scanner, which I now realize will not working for police/fire her in Btown. I got some good info from ofd8001 and wyshack about trunking and P-25.

It seems I need a scanner that will work with either the Indiana Project Hoosier SAFE-T (Motorola) or the Indiana Project Hoosier SAFE-T (P-25) (I'm not sure which is which and what Bloomington is on).

Can anyone recommend one to me? That's pretty easy to program? My husband got me a RS digital one about 4 years ago and - truly, I'm fairly intelligent - but I could NOT figure the manual out for the life of me. I ended up selling it. :(

Any advice would be very appreciated! Thanks, friends!
 

afdscan

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Joined
Oct 20, 2007
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248
Location
Central Indiana
Hi, all -

So, I jumped the gun and bought an analog Whistler 1025 scanner, which I now realize will not working for police/fire her in Btown. I got some good info from ofd8001 and wyshack about trunking and P-25.

It seems I need a scanner that will work with either the Indiana Project Hoosier SAFE-T (Motorola) or the Indiana Project Hoosier SAFE-T (P-25) (I'm not sure which is which and what Bloomington is on).

Can anyone recommend one to me? That's pretty easy to program? My husband got me a RS digital one about 4 years ago and - truly, I'm fairly intelligent - but I could NOT figure the manual out for the life of me. I ended up selling it. :(

Any advice would be very appreciated! Thanks, friends!

You might want to take a look at the Uniden HomePatrol scanners. I would recommend the HomePatrol 2 because it will accommodate the P-25 Phase 2 systems when your local county upgrades. They can easily be programmed with just your zip code. Then you can modify the program to listen to just what you're most interested in hearing. You can also download software that allows you to program the scanner however you want. There are plenty of "how to program" videos on YouTube. The HomePatrol scanners can be found on Amazon or you can also find them at scannermaster.com
 

INDY72

Monitoring since 1982, using radios since 1991.
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Indianapolis, IN
Yes you need P25 assuredly as your county uses the SAFE-T P25 trs which is Phase I currently but will go to Phase II in a couple of years.

Sent from my LG-K330 using Tapatalk
 

Sherrikat

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Nov 13, 2016
Messages
26
Location
Bloomington, Indiana
Thank you, Milf and Tim! Holy moly - those bad boys are PRICEY! Well, hubby and I just retired in June and we used to love to scan. Lots of time for it now, so it's probably a good investment. :) You've been very helpful! Happy scanning!
 

k7joe

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Feb 20, 2015
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Using an outside antenna really makes a difference on the HP

The only thing I don't like about the HP is that you don't know which tower you are receiving and that matters some times.

I'm told there is an extreme upgrade but not sure if that upgrade gives the info on which tower is being monitored. I can usually tell using signal strength. bloomington likes to go to "localized" coverage, especially when there is an event in town, so as not to tie up several radio sites simulcasting the same broadcast at the same time. When they do that, for me, it requires a directional antenna and knowing which tower to point toward...

Bloomington, Hindustan, Knights Ridge, Nashville, Bedford, Martinsville, are the primary towers for the area as far as I can discern.
 

k7joe

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Feb 20, 2015
Messages
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Got ya. Well.. plenty to listen to ...

Monitoring INDOT Seymour sub station is really helpful with the snow and bad weather - the snow plow drivers talk a lot about road conditions. Only problem is that their accent is twangy - sounds like the tow truck on the movie "Cars" ... like they all moved here from back-water Kentucky or something. Ha ha.

Do you notice the dispatchers at the Central dispatch center can be very slow to dispatch EMS services? - I'll hear a call come in, say, police requesting ambulance from s MVA ... and from the time we hear a request call to the time the dispatchers get the tones out is often more than 7 minutes. A newspaper reporter tipped me off and said to watch for that - she is working on a story about it for the Herald.

Scanner is way more reliable for local news since there are no local TV news channels here.

Have fun -

My music quote: you can stab it with a steely knife but you just can't kill the beast.
 

INDY72

Monitoring since 1982, using radios since 1991.
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Messages
14,651
Location
Indianapolis, IN
It should never take more than 5 minutes tops even in an busy queue for request for EMS to get paged out. It takes 10 to 30 seconds to type it into the system, and hit enter, about 2 seconds for it to pop on the Fire/EMS dispatch/control screen, and then maybe another minute or so tops for that person to set it up on the CAD and send it, with it going out on locution within seconds to a minute depending on the size of the queue, or maybe a minute or so longer if they use manual dispatching. Now back in the day, when it was all done by phone and manual dispatching, it could take longer.
 
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