If you're an authorized user, why not use a real radio as opposed to a scanner?
Well, I do. But I also like experimenting. I am wanting to see if I can get the scanner to work properly with RAS on my stuff, not only for monitoring, but also so it will hopefully work properly with others, without decode issues.
But I read into your comment, and the "💩" icons that another left, guess he felt like was funny. No worries, I -can- skip over the smartass stuff, however, I am responding to it to hopefully shut that down, or make it known I am aware, so we can move past that pettiness.
Yes, I program radios, big deal. An SDS100/200 is great for monitoring and seeing what is going on with a system, even simplex DMR, in a very convenient form factor, with many features and settings included, that a radio won't show you.
I see now that I was absolutely incorrect about RAS and the voice data bits, it's the Enh. Enc. that does that. (MOT doesn't exactly share that with you) We turned ENC off, so the voice degradation and range loss due to complications with "Enc deployed as an after-though" is not an issue anymore. But the RAS does affect the scanners (SDS and TRX series) with the FEC. Turning off TG's in the TRX series isn't a very desirable way to monitor anything. I would hope a FW would be introduced in the future where the proper (known) RAS code could be entered into a scanner to help clear this up, but I am doubtful that will happen though, as this isn't something that many would actually be able to utilize. (Even though HAM radio uses it a lot also)
And interestingly enough, it seems an older XPR series portable using an early version of 16.0 will monitor a system using RAS, without the key in it, that one with later 16.0 won't. It seems as though Mot. introduced something in a FW update back in the day when RAS was brought out, that made it sound scrambled, without the proper RAS code entered. (it doesn't "mute" it?) The audio comes through pretty decent using older 16.0., without the RAS key, and no ENC used.
Is it wrong, or frowned upon to experiment? I think not. Mototrbo made radio programming interesting again back in the "narrowbanding" times. Instead of trying to be creative with different PL types, using 2 different freqs hoping for some privacy with simplex comms between 2 radios, etc., to using variable TG's, and even Enc. Mototrbo was a breath of fresh air, in a stale room of analog.