DickH
Member
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2004
- Messages
- 4,067
While recuperating, I had lots of free time so I decided to try a very inexpensive Chinese portable radio to use as a scanner. They are basically for transmitting on two Ham bands, but I noticed they cover Hi Band (136 to 174) and UHF (400 to 520). After reading a lot, I bought a Baofeng UV-82 for about $27 from Amazon. I thought for $27 it can't be much good, but it will be fun to play around with. I just checked the Amazon site and the UV-82 is now $26 but they have a combination that adds the programming cable and a remote spkr/mic, all for just over $35 which makes it eligible for free shipping, too!
It was a bit complicated to get started, but after it was up and running, I was astounded with its performance. My area is hilly (nearly mountainous), yet I can hear stations 35 to 40 miles away with the Baofeng rubber duck antenna inside my apartment. The reception is as good or better than the other 10 scanners I own.
IN THE BOX: radio, battery, antenna, drop-in charger tray with A/C adapter, belt clip, handstrap and printed manual.
PROs:
Printed Manual.
Free program (CHIRP) available.
Can scan 128 channels.
Dispaly color can be Purple, Blue or Orange.
Freq. steps 2.5/5/6.25/10/12.5/20/25 (khz).
Voice prompt (tells what you just keyed in).
CTCSS & DCS squelch operation.
Transmit can be disabled per channel.
FM Broacast band, 65 to 108 (Foreign and U.S.).
41 Menu items can be set on the keyboard.
Better volume than regular scanners (no distortion at full volume).
With CHIRP, you can make an unlimited number of groups of freqs.
Battery gives me about 18 hours running, about 4-1/2 hours to re-charge.
CONs:
Scans Channel Name or Freq. - can not see both together.
Squelch tail can't be adjusted.
SUMMARY: If you want a good Hi Band and UHF, non-trunking scanner for a very reasonable price I don't think you can find a better deal than the Baofeng UV-82. There are lots of videos on YouTube and this site has much information. Miklor Information Site, VHF UHF Handheld Radios
It was a bit complicated to get started, but after it was up and running, I was astounded with its performance. My area is hilly (nearly mountainous), yet I can hear stations 35 to 40 miles away with the Baofeng rubber duck antenna inside my apartment. The reception is as good or better than the other 10 scanners I own.
IN THE BOX: radio, battery, antenna, drop-in charger tray with A/C adapter, belt clip, handstrap and printed manual.
PROs:
Printed Manual.
Free program (CHIRP) available.
Can scan 128 channels.
Dispaly color can be Purple, Blue or Orange.
Freq. steps 2.5/5/6.25/10/12.5/20/25 (khz).
Voice prompt (tells what you just keyed in).
CTCSS & DCS squelch operation.
Transmit can be disabled per channel.
FM Broacast band, 65 to 108 (Foreign and U.S.).
41 Menu items can be set on the keyboard.
Better volume than regular scanners (no distortion at full volume).
With CHIRP, you can make an unlimited number of groups of freqs.
Battery gives me about 18 hours running, about 4-1/2 hours to re-charge.
CONs:
Scans Channel Name or Freq. - can not see both together.
Squelch tail can't be adjusted.
SUMMARY: If you want a good Hi Band and UHF, non-trunking scanner for a very reasonable price I don't think you can find a better deal than the Baofeng UV-82. There are lots of videos on YouTube and this site has much information. Miklor Information Site, VHF UHF Handheld Radios