Understanding scanning, What is scanning, What is searching – Uniden UBC93XLT User Manual

Page 11: Conventional scanning

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Understanding Scanning

Understanding Scanning

This section provides you with background on how

scanning works. You don’t really need to know all of

this to use your scanner, but some background

knowledge will help you get the most from your

UBC93XLT.

What is Scanning?

Unlike standard AM or FM radio stations, most two-

way communications do not transmit continuously.

Your UBC93XLT scans programmed channels until

it finds an active frequency, then stops on that

frequency and remains on that channel as long as

the transmission continues. When the transmission

ends, the scanning cycle resumes until the scanner

receives another transmission.

What is Searching?

The UBC93XLT can search for active frequencies.

This is different from scanning because you are

searching for frequencies that have not been

programmed into the scanner. When you select

frequency bands to search, the scanner searches

for any active frequency within the lower and upper

limits you specify. When the scanner finds an active

frequency, it stops on that frequency as long as the

transmission lasts. If you think the frequency is

interesting, you can program it into one of the banks.

If not, you can continue to search.

Conventional Scanning

Conventional scanning is a relatively simple concept.

Each group of users in a conventional system is

assigned a single frequency (for simplex systems) or

two frequencies (for repeater systems). Any time one

of them transmits, their transmission always goes

out on the same frequency. Up until the late 1980’s

Understanding Scanning

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