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Vintage Scanners - Radio not Computer
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<blockquote data-quote="mark" data-source="post: 229502" data-attributes="member: 376"><p>Somewhere in a closet sits a bearcat III alongside a IV,,,a 210, a five-six handheld, and a 15. There's a Uniden UBC 780 XLT kicking around here somewhere waiting for the new tricounty interoperable communications consortium network to become functional next month.</p><p></p><p>The III and IV receive much better than anything I've put them up against, and like you mention the audio is great. I'm not a collector, but resale is nil, and it doesn't cost me to toss them up on the shelf. I remember when the first primitive programables came out, One had punch cards to program frequencies. Regency had aluminum combs with teeth you had to break off in a specific sequence and insert to get the channel you wanted. Crystals are just old style reliable, and neat.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mark, post: 229502, member: 376"] Somewhere in a closet sits a bearcat III alongside a IV,,,a 210, a five-six handheld, and a 15. There's a Uniden UBC 780 XLT kicking around here somewhere waiting for the new tricounty interoperable communications consortium network to become functional next month. The III and IV receive much better than anything I've put them up against, and like you mention the audio is great. I'm not a collector, but resale is nil, and it doesn't cost me to toss them up on the shelf. I remember when the first primitive programables came out, One had punch cards to program frequencies. Regency had aluminum combs with teeth you had to break off in a specific sequence and insert to get the channel you wanted. Crystals are just old style reliable, and neat. [/QUOTE]
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