Is an analog scanner worth purchasing nowadays?

ERADIO

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Hello I live in Bryant,AR just wanted to ask you all for some opinions on analog scanners in this present day. I cannot afford a digital one at the moment. I haven’t owned an analog one in quite some time. Is it worth purchasing one nowadays? I like listening to hams, rail, fire and police. I know law enforcement is probably very limited on analog.
 

03msc

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Many ham radio repeaters are still analog. As well as GMRS. And a majority of rail radio traffic is also still analog.

You are correct that a lot of law enforcement is operating in a digital mode. Some EMS and Fire is too. Some paging is still analog, though.

Check out the database to see what it shows for your area.
 

D31245

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You are in luck @ERADIO, virtually all agencies in your county (Saline) - except one - are analog FM narrow mode and are listenable on an analog scanner - although they also operate on P-25 Phase II (and may in the future fully transition) which an analog scanner will not pick up.

Check out the Entity links at the top of the main link for airports and amateur radio frequencies.

1746006843882.png

Have you looked into which analog model scanner you may be interested in?
 
Last edited:

03msc

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You are in luck @ERADIO, virtually all agencies in your county (Saline) - except one - are analog FM narrow mode and are listenable on an analog scanner - although they also operate on P-25 Phase II (and may in the future fully transition) which an analog scanner will not pick up.

Check out the Entity links at the top of the main link for airports and amateur radio frequencies.

View attachment 182753

Have you looked into which analog model scanner you may be interested in?

I'm not in that area so I can't say for sure but if you read the notes and look at AWIN, it looks like they are heavily on AWIN and not analog. Could easily be a combination of both but when a county has a laundry list of talkgroups on AWIN that is typically a good indicator that they are using it primarily.

That's why I wasn't going to say they're on analog since there's a good chance they aren't. Wasn't going to take that risk.

Maybe someone in that area will chime in soon and clarify. I'll gladly be wrong but the TGs in the db for them show the big E on AWIN.
 

KK4JUG

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If it was me, I would try to buy with a view toward covering alll the bases, just in case. For instance, if you travel with the scanner, you're certain to encounter more digital. If you're not traveling with the scanner, analog should be just fine at the present time.
 

Freemor

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Just wanted to add for other that might be reading this thread and wondering about analog scanners. I got a small handheld one for Christmas. A Uniden SR30C so a fairly basic model by today's standards and I love it.

It's small, it travels well. And I get to hear lots of stuff on it. So as long as people have realistic expectations going in I definitely think it is worthwhile.

At home I listen to plane and boats, and Maine police, EMS, fire, and ambulance. Our local services are on P25 but some of the local rural fire departments still use VHF. Even our town uses both. so if something is going on it's handy having both so I don't miss bits.

Having it for Airband and Marine is handy too as I like to use my SDR for AIS or 1090 watching so with the scanner and the SDR I can track both positions and what people are saying.

When traveling to different locations it is loads of fun because it is a lot easier to pack and set up than the SDR. And in bigger cities I get to listen in on things like rail, taxis, construction crews, air shows, transit, harbor control, and many other things.

So, for me analog scanners are far, far from dead. Though I can see that if a persons primary interests were police or other services that have moved to P25 than maybe not so much. But I wouldn't be without it now.
 

KK4JUG

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Just wanted to add for other that might be reading this thread and wondering about analog scanners. I got a small handheld one for Christmas. A Uniden SR30C so a fairly basic model by today's standards and I love it.
...and they're $500+ cheaper than Uniden's SDS series.
 

03msc

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Yes, it all comes down to what you're wanting to listen to. There is plenty of analog traffic in the airwaves and these analog scanners are great for that. If you're wanting to listen to pub safety and the departments are on P25 or DMR or NXDN then you'll be out of luck with the analog scanner alone. All comes down to intended use for sure.
 

Magnetsteve

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You are in luck @ERADIO, virtually all agencies in your county (Saline) - except one - are analog FM narrow mode and are listenable on an analog scanner - although they also operate on P-25 Phase II (and may in the future fully transition) which an analog scanner will not pick up.

Check out the Entity links at the top of the main link for airports and amateur radio frequencies.

View attachment 182753

Have you looked into which analog model scanner you may be interested in?


Arkansan here. All public safety in Saline County is full-time AWIN. The VHF listed are their old frequencies before they transitioned to AWIN.
Bryant Police is full time encryption along with Benton PD. Fire and EMS are "in the clear" on AWIN. Pretty much the only thing you can listen to is ham and weather on an analog scanner. I think Saline county VFD's may still have simulcast dispatch on VHF and AWIN.

Save your pennies, by a SDS.
 

wbswetnam

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Yeah, it depends on where you're located. For example if you live in Clark County, all fire dispatch is analog narrow FM. Nearly all local police are encrypted anyway so a digital scanner can't help except to monitor state agencies (like the State Police) or outside counties. So if you live in Arkadelphia let's say then you're good to go with an analog scanner.
 

QASSIS

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YES, if you like listening to what's on those frequencies you can pick up (I DO!).
It definitely keeps me aware of things going on in my community I'd not know otherwise. Does anyone else enjoy ANALOG scanning?
The following list if tags (my names for what I'm scanning - i.e. RR being railroad, etc) and frequencies for one of my Analog Scanners is:
fire-vp-lsvl1 153.83,fire-vp-lsvl2 153.995,fire-vp-lsvl3 154.265,fire-vp-lsvs4 154.7175,Evans1 150.805,Evans2 155.715,Rosepine1 154.01,Rosepine2 154.13,Simpson 155.0925,Simpson 158.8875,LLAW1 39.46,LLAW1D 39.46,LFIRE2 39.48,LFIRE2D 39.48,LLAW3 45.86,LAW3D 45.86,LFIRE4D 45.88,VCALL10 155.7525,VTAC11 151.1375,VTAC12 154.4525,VTAC13 158.7375,VTAC14 159.4725,Ntl-Rpt1 159.4725,Ntl-Rpt2 158.7375,Ntl-Rpt3 159.4725,Ntl-Rpt4 151.1375,Ntl-Rpt5 154.4525,Ntl-Rpt6 158.7375,CA-RR1 160.92,CA-RR2 161.1,CA-RR3 161.19,CA-RR4 161.28,AA-RR1 161.25,AA-RR2 161.355,AA-RR3 161.37,AA-RR4 161.385,?RR1 160.2,?RR2 160.215,?RR3 160.23,RR-CPKC-02 160.26,RR-CPKC-01 160.305,KCS3 160.35,KCS4 160.74,KCS5 161.055,KCS6 452.9125,KCS7 457.9125,RR-CPKC-POLICE 159.885,RR-CALL-IN-COORD 160.425,Grms-01 462.5625,Grms-02 462.5875,Grms-03 462.6125,Grms-04 462.6375,Grms-05 462.6625,Grms-06 462.6875,Grms-07 462.7125,Grms-08 467.5625,Grms-09 467.5875,Grms-10 467.6125,Grms-11 467.6375,Grms-12 467.6625,Grms-13 467.6875,Grms-14 467.7125,Grms-15 462.55,Grms-16 462.575,Grms-17 462.6,Grms-18 462.625,Grms-19 462.65,Grms-20 462.675,Grms-21 462.7,Grms-22 462.725,LsvRptOut 462.625,LsvRpt-IN 467.625,TAXI YT 152.45,TAXI YT2 157.71,NOAA (mostly Ft. Polk military following) 162.425,APP/DEV 123.7,GROUND 121.8,TOWER1 119,PLK APP 261.3,ATIS 134.85,RANGE1 143.2,GROUND2 239.25,FF 254.8,TOWER2 257.75,ATIS2 282.2,RANGE3 353.3,POE-OPS 374.2,Plk AEX CTAF 122.8,AEX APP/DEP 125.4,AEX CTAF/TWR 127.35,LiveATC.net 120.7,? air-01 121.3,? air-02 257.8,? air-03 269.2,UNK-active 119.35,? air-04 119.8,? air-05 282.3,? air-06 124.2,? air-07 253.75,? air-08 290.4,? air-09 346.6,? air-10 135,? air-11 243,? air-12 121.5,air-2-air 122.75,Military Helicopter 123.025
 

PACNWDude

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I mentioned in another thread with a similar topic, that even in my P25 Phase 2 TDMA location, there is still a lot transmitted in analog. Vessels, aircraft, FRS/GMRS, business band radios and others. If that analog scanner is a Uniden, many have Close Call and you can hear a lot with that feature turned on, especially when out and about. I find myself using that in my daily commute, and hear interesting things in analog mode with Close Call enabled.

(You are lucky that much of your local comms is still analog though).
 

mass-man

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Save for the 700mhz stuff all the national interop freq are in my analog scanner…and fairly often something pops up! Even on the 800 freq! Once it gets warmer and drier around here the grass fires make for interesting monitoring.
 

QASSIS

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I mentioned in another thread with a similar topic, that even in my P25 Phase 2 TDMA location, there is still a lot transmitted in analog. Vessels, aircraft, FRS/GMRS, business band radios and others. If that analog scanner is a Uniden, many have Close Call and you can hear a lot with that feature turned on, especially when out and about. I find myself using that in my daily commute, and hear interesting things in analog mode with Close Call enabled.

(You are lucky that much of your local comms is still analog though).
My Uniden BC125AC is new (had it about a month) and I've not tried the close call feature yet so doing that now. I'm by Fort Polk so I'm close-call scanning 225-320 Mil-Air as none of my Military Air Frequencies are currently in this range.
 

wbswetnam

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Some nationwide aircraft frequencies worth monitoring for sure are 121.500 (aircraft emergency), 129.450 (ARINC), and 123.025 (Helicopters air to air).
 

oaktree_b

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Aircraft and railroads still use analog, many businesses and schools still use analog, FRS and GMRS are analog, CB is analog. Lots to still listen to, you just have to hunt a bit.
 
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