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Aug 27, 2014. #3. rescuecomm said: In the UHF band, the lower of the listed frequencies should be the repeater output. Thus 453.300 and 458.300 as a pair, you should be listening on 453.300 mhz. Bob. Thanks Bob. Guess I'm not seeing a range in any listing of police frequencies.
Jan 27, 2014. #3. Check the RR Database for the area of interest. The Mode column will tell you what type of system that is and from that what type of scanner you'll need. FM or FMN will be analog. P25 will be digital. For trunked systems, the column of interest is Type. Match your scanner with the system listed there.
The BF-F8HP, although it will transmit on FRS an GMRS channels, is NOT type accepted (legal) to use on those frequencies. MURS should be OK. Marine channels definitely not on land. Not type accepted there either. I would never rely on a Baofeng radio in a true emergency.
Feb 22, 2007. Messages. 6,086. Nov 21, 2020. #5. djeplett said: You also can never assume that even though an agency began using digital that they will never use their old analog equipment as backup occasionally. That is why both analog and digital licenses may be listed for a particular agency.
859.9375 Allentown Police Ch9 (Trunked System) 860.9375 Allentown Police Ch10 (Trunked System) 154.5150 Allentown Police Reserve 464.1625 Allentown College Police 155.9250 BerksLehigh Police 463.6375 Cedar Crest College - Public Safety 159.4500 Emmaus Police F-1 153.8450 Emmaus Police F-2 155.6100 Fountain Hill Police - Link to Base 2 (Bethlehem)
Location. Saratoga, CA. Mar 27, 2006. #3. Oregon State Police Frequencies - Thanks for the Feedback. mh34444, Thanks for the info. RadioReference is about the only web site that has reliable information regarding the Oregon State Police system. Thanks again for confirming the RR database.
Jan 17, 2024. #7. prcguy said: It’s a lie, no frequencies are mentioned. Instead its “program some VHF air or mil air or some public service frequencies in“. My 7yr old grand daughter can give better scanner advice than this. Thanks for doing the video on the subject of scanning, it will help a lot of people.
the UHF 450-470 is also generally 12.5 Khz, unless a rare 6.25 is found. the 457/467 Maritime channels have begun moving from 12,5 to 6.25 with Narrowbanding and DMR. wtp said: FRS/GRMS band - 462.000 - 468.000 FM (5kHz) that is quite a bit to search for 22 frequencies. a list of frequencies would be better.
On November 27 the new Sydney-Newcastle analog liaison channels - for non-police users and VHF only NSW country police users - were made operational, linking Ch 4 (Eastern Sydney) and 41 (Western Sydney) with Ch 35 (Central Coast/Newcastle) eg Volunteer rescue services, medical heliocopters etc
Marine VHF channel 16 is 156.800 MHz. The space between Marine channel 16 and channels 74 (below 16) and 77 (above 16) is vacant on-purpose as a "guard" band. Guard bands are used throughout the radio spectrum as a way to reduce adjacent channel interference on emergency or weak-signal frequencies ... marine VHF 16 is the designated channel for ...