Scanner Tales: More weird scanners

There have been some really weird scanners made over the years, I have written about some of them. Here are a couple more that I recall seeing here and there.

GE Searcher

This thing (well two things actually) was a neat idea but flawed in execution. There was a handheld version as well as a desktop/luggable one. Both used the same method of “programming”. Each of the four channels had individual tuning knobs so one could tune it to whatever frequency they wanted as long as it was on the VHF high-band. The smaller one used a set of 6 AA cells, the big guy used 6 D-Cells or AC house current. The big’un also had an AM/FM radio so it could provide tunes or the local news.

I remember seeing these at the local Radio Shack back in the mid and late 1970’s. I don’t think they were a catalog item however, but some stores sold stuff that wasn’t in the catalog. They were also sold in other stores, I think they had them at places like Montgomery Wards and Service Merchandise.

The handheld version was bulky, even by 1970’s standards. Tuning it was pretty difficult, you had to wait until the station you wanted to hear was transmitting and hope you found it before they finished talking. While that was the norm for any tunable receiver then, it was more difficult as the knobs and range of motion was very limited on this radio. Once you did find the right station the radio was pretty stable.

The bigger radio, like many other portable radios of the time, was designed to be used at home or outside. You could plug it in to a wall outlet or run off the D-Cell batteries. Battery life was pretty poor but the AM/FM audio was darned good. The scanner was the same as the handheld one but it had an meter that doubled as a relative frequency display and battery level. One would think it would have also been used for signal strength but one would be wrong.

I played with one or two of these back then in the stores and I had a friend who had one. They were too expensive and limited to high-band only (so no State Police or UHF police channels in my area).

Bearcat BC-E 8-track scanner

This was actually a pretty effective little device from the early 1980’s. It was a VHF high and low band 4-channel scanner that was built into an 8-track cartridge and was plugged into your 8-track player. It had a door on the bottom for crystals and the audio came out the stereo speakers. Power came from the 8-track player, I assume they had some sort of power provided to the tape head or something.

My Dad had one of these in his Buick. He was heavily into 8-tracks and stayed with them even long after the rest of the world switched to Cassettes and later CD’s. He already had a CB in the car (at the time everyone did) and did not want another antenna on the car. He got one of these at Wards and I got some crystals for the local channels for him. The darned thing worked great!

The reception was darned good considering there was no outside antenna capability. Somehow it was able to utilize the stereo for the antenna as well as power and audio delivery. It used the same 10.8 MHz. IF crystals as other Bearcat scanners of the era.

We had the local police, fire and Sheriff’s channels in that little radio and it got a lot of use. It disappeared eventually, I never figured out whatever happened to it.

Scanocular

This was quite possibly the weirdest radio I ever saw. I had seen pictures and heard stories about this but never saw one until I set up the Scanner Master Museum. Made by (or rather for) Memorex (the recording tape guys) I suspect the scanner part was supplied by Uniden or one of its suppliers.

This thing was a 100-channel scanner covering the VHF high, UHF and 800 bands as well as FM and TV audio. It was built upon a set of 8x25 binoculars. Intended for the race or airshow fan in particular, the idea was that you could watch the action and listen to the scanner at the same time.

I never really got a chance to use one of these but from what I have seen and heard neither the scanner nor the binoculars were very good. It did not have a speaker; you used earphones only. Probably a good thing as the sound levels would have made a speaker pretty much useless at racetracks and airshows anyway.

Regency MX7000

I have written about this before but it bears repeating here it was so weird. When it was introduced the ads showed a case the same as the then current Regency scanner and RH256 two-way radios with a wedged front panel. I thought this would be great, my first 800 MHz. scanner and I could slot it right in where the M100 was in my car with my UHF and VHF Regency mobiles. When I got it however I discovered that the MX7000 was markedly smaller than the other Regency radios and had no mounting holes. It didn’t even have a mounting bracket for the car.

Eventually I was able to source a compression bracket for it but it too was weird. I did try it out in the car but reverted to my trusty M100 as it had a faster scan rate and fit the aesthetic I had going at the time.

The MX7000 was possible the most sensitive scanner I ever had. It would pick up full-scale stuff on a whip antenna that barely ticked the squelch on another scanner on an outside antenna. It also had full coverage, including the cellular bands and was one of the first radios I used for Military Aviation. It had however very poor selectivity.

The biggest problem was the scan speed. You could measure it with a calendar if you were patient, it was that slow. The other issue was the power connector. While it came with an AC power cable, the connector was this weird 3-pin thing in a triangle layout. I ended up drilling a hole in the back of my radio and putting in a coaxial power plug.

Radio Shack PRO2026

This was the first scanner I ever bought that I truly and deeply hated. This thing was an abomination from the start. Built by Uniden for RadioShack, it took all the good Uniden features out and replaced them with all the bad Radio Shack ones. One of the big difference between Radio Shack scanners and those by Uniden/Bearcat and Regency was that one needed to press the “Program” button on RadioShack scanners to go into programming mode. On other scanners you could just type in the frequency and press Enter.

The PRO2026 was basically a neutered BC760XLT, same case style and shared innards. Instead of the easy programming of the BC760 and it’s kin one had to use the silly Program button on the 2026 in order to program it. They also had to add a couple additional buttons to the 2026 to handle the RadioShack programming methods, this made the action buttons under the display smaller and more difficult to operate.

Perhaps it was my aversion to the operation of the 2026 that clouded my opinion but I could have sworn it was far less sensitive and selective than the 760. I had both and always thought the 760 performed much better.

I never before nor since despised a scanner like I did the Pro2026. Perhaps it was unjustified but abhorrence rarely is.
 
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IC-R20

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I think it was a legit Sony product. The physical fit and feel was spot on for other Sony products of the era. The programming almost felt like it was logical to the engineer who designed the workflow, but not to the userbase that would be buying it.
The designer only considered the Japanese market which isn't as spoonfed and diabetic as the pampers wearing USA consumer. They had some really great shortwave portables over the decades as well that were similar.
 

RFI-EMI-GUY

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Folks, . . . Does anyone here recognize the specific wire harness connector style ? The original external speaker was the SP-1. I'm attempting to restore two of these old workhorses using the factory type connectors. Are they MOLEX, or Ampseal, or Amphenol ? I dunno.
They are Mizu-P25 connectors. I bought the mating connectors from Mouser to clean up my MR8100 pigtails and to make mating cables. The items in the MOUSER order (Except first line item Batteries) are for the complete set.
 

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wqmg930

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Initially, I had to find a MX 7000 side view because I "thought" it had mounting screws on the side.

I bought this bad little boy at Andy's Radio off of Telephone Road in Houston. I believe this was in the late '80s.

In my opinion, Regency made outstanding scanners. I paid $518 for it. This was a great radio due to "no gaps."

At the time, bag cell phones were around. If you were in a small city, some folks could follow a cell phone conversation.

If my remote recall is correct, this radio went from 25 to 1300 Mhz.

I believe the MX 7000 was slow scanning.

The radio crapped out when the keyboard stopped working. In the attached pic, it looks like someone bypassed the keyboard.

Later, I bought one of the best radios I've ever owned, a Regency HX-1500. The guts of the HX-1500 were quite impressive. I believe this scanner was "shielded."

This was one of the best I've own.

There was yet another slow scanner, the AOR AR 1000 which I accidentally fried after playing radio technician.
I had the MX5500 - wore out the keyboard - I did love listening to tv late at night on the radio
 

jmp883

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Some interesting radios posted here.

Of the ones listed so far I had 2 Pro-2026', one mobile and one in the house. I always thought it was a pretty good radio. I don't seem to remember the programming issues, but I do remember not having to do much with it once I had it initially programmed. It did have excellent audio and was small enough to fit almost anywhere you might want to mount in a vehicle. It would have been nice it if it had PL in it. I learned a trick from a friend of mine that if you clipped one of the leads on of the diodes on the front of the circuit board it would unblock the cellular bands. I did that to one of my 2026's but after a few weeks I resoldered the lead, the aviation, railroads, and emergency services were far more interesting to listen to.

I also had a Sony WaveHawk. Nice radio, good audio, but as I recall it was a pain in the ass to program. But when I wanted to listen to aviation that was my go-to radio.
 

mws72

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How about the 760XLT clones that Scanner World sold the 950XLT. Inside the same as the 760XLT just labelled as the 950XLT on the outside. They also had the 600XLT I forget which Uniden scanner it was.
 

N9JIG

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How about the 760XLT clones that Scanner World sold the 950XLT. Inside the same as the 760XLT just labelled as the 950XLT on the outside. They also had the 600XLT I forget which Uniden scanner it was.
I think the 600 was a clone of the 560. They used different color plastics for the front panel to help differentiate them from the 760 and 560.
 

csh102

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They are Mizu-P25 connectors. I bought the mating connectors from Mouser to clean up my MR8100 pigtails and to make mating cables. The items in the MOUSER order (Except first line item Batteries) are for the complete set.
Many thanks again. This helps. I have two of these units, . . . each with the antenna connector positioned on the case along with the proper SP-1 speakers. One unit still retains the original MIZU connectors.
 

nosoup4u

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That is a new one and it looks more like a car stereo. The Icom R-7000 had an optional IR remote, but it was really a communications receiver, not a scanner.
Scanner World used to sell them back in the early 90's. I had always wanted to get one and replace my car stereo with it.
 

kc2asb

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Scanner World used to sell them back in the early 90's. I had always wanted to get one and replace my car stereo with it.
Scanner World had full page ads in Popular Communications every month. Those were the days! The SR-001's styling still looks contemporary today
 

ratboy

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The whole 100/105, 200/205, etc thing was very odd to me. I had the Scanner World ones, mostly, as far as Uniden made radios went. Was the Shinwa the one that also made a great heater for your car? There was one I had that just cooked itself. So many radios, so many years ago..
 

N9JIG

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Was the 205 no longer modifiable for cell frequencies? I always thought that was the difference between the 200 & 205.
I don't think that was it. The 200/100 were sold by general dealers and Scanner World had the 205/105, much like they had the 950 instead of the 760.

Uniden also sold the BC100 and 200 with Regency branding and model numbers, other than cosmetics they were identical.
 

ratboy

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Was the 205 no longer modifiable for cell frequencies? I always thought that was the difference between the 200 & 205.
As far as I know the only differences between them was the 05's were made in the Phillipines, and were a different case color. I had them opened up side by side and saw nothing to make me think otherwise.
 

kc2asb

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Circa 1997, here is another one that might qualify as a weird scanner, the Uniden BCT-10 BearTracker. The scanner that looked more like a radar detector. It scanned police and highway patrol, allowing the user to select his/her state or Canadian province. When it detected highway patrol and/or mobile extenders, it would sound an alarm. It came with the rubber duck antenna pictured, as well as a flexible mobile antenna. $299 in 1997 dollars.


bct10.jpg
 
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trentbob

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Seems the Uniden MR8100 would fall into the weird scanner family, with its unconventional keypad. I remember these being advertised in Pop Comm back in the late 80's and early 90's. I believe it was referred to it as a "professional scanner". Did anyone here own one back in the day?

You couldn't beat those huge dials, it looked like a professional radio and fit well in any car, I wish that design was expanded on, I did have one of those but it was somewhat limited in its capacity as newer scanners came out but that design was great.
 

trentbob

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So if anybody is familiar with this scanner, I owned it for about 5 years early '80s maybe I just don't remember and finally sold it, it was an oddball.

It had something in the name Fox like Fox something or something Fox it might have been its own company. If not maybe Regency made it. I didn't find a picture of it.

It was programmable but not with a keyboard you open the door on the top and it had an entry system on top that you open the door to get at. It was direct entry, no code books Here's some good Clues.

Had had a Mot pin antenna connection, it was small, like the size of an 8-track cartridge. Small for a scanner. I think it was 10 channels it wasn't big enough for 16. Yellow front plate with scanning diodes, black chassis. All plastic.

You always regret scanners that you sell but right now I regret the ones that I kept LOL in the garage. Never going to use them again.

It does remind me every time when I enjoyed scanning a lot more than I do now. If anybody knows the radio let me know, thanks.
 

kc2asb

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Found this one in an Ebay auction. It's a Fox BMP 10/60. It does not have the door on top that you mentioned, but is 10 channels. No yellow panel on front either. Does this one have any similarities to the one you had?

fox bmp 10-60.jpg
 
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