Radio Scanning - Is There Anything Left To Listen To??

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Published 2018-03-20

All Comments (21)
  • @adjo82
    I used to love my Realistic base scanner back in the 90's. Fire service was about 71mhz, police was about 440mhz,cordless phones was about 31mhz mobile phones was in the 900's mhz, police helecopyer was out 133mhz, Ambulances was about 166 mhz. Great Times laying in bed for hours eavesdropping, then when I had a car I used to listen to 71.150 which was westmids fire service and used to go to the fires to watch 😂
  • @prillewitz
    Remembered when I was a little kid and my father and I couldn’t sleep he was searching on our wireless set for US jazz music. By accident we heard American taxi’s, probably through active sunspots, which was absolutely amazing to me. I will never forget this and this was really the base for my interest in technique.
  • @rsattahip
    I remember when you could listen to the primitive car phones in the late 70's with a Bearcat Police and Fire scanner. Listening to the same clown call 5 women in a row and get turned down was more amusing than fiction.
  • Thank you for someone finally producing a decent accurate frequency list. Used to be an avid CBer growing up in the 80s and 90s going to get scanning again, and invest in SDR / digital scanning equipment.
  • @Scotian280
    I was lucky enough to be into scanning in what I think was the golden age of scanning.. Late 80s to late 90s. It was so much fun, I could hear all the police, cordless phones and even the new Mobile phones of the time. In my opinion, all the things that are worth listening to are now encrypted (other than airband) and that is no coincidence.
  • I used to build small FM transmitters and bug the downstairs of the house while I tuned in on the commercial FM band in my room :D ..Memories
  • @george5120
    Thank you for not having background music, intro splash screens, and badgering us to subscribe.
  • @renny9879
    I listen to the police all the time in fact I’m doing so right now I live in Ventura County California. All analog unencrypted.
  • @MitchLambert
    This is so helpful. Thank you. I'm in East Manchester and after a visit to the RSGB at Bletchley Park about 6 months ago, I have bought an SDR Play Duo and stuck a Discone on a pole on my roof. I'm constantly learning and find it fascinating, but working out where to look has been a challenge. This is going to be an invaluable resource. Thanks again.
  • @andykirby
    This is awesome mate, a non BS approach to what is still a fascinating hobby!
  • Useful and thanks for your hard work putting it all together. It's sad that a lot of interesting stuff is no longer listenable but there will be a lot of old gear users around for a while.
  • Hi there Lewis 05:00 here in FLA. USA. Just watching another Vid. Of yours W/my wife. She's got a thing for your Golden Voice.😍 I'll have my TX-Iguanna ring you when he warms up later on. Great work. Spot On. Straight Away. &Last but not least BOBS YOUR UNClE😆
  • @CJ-rf9jm
    There was a friend I worked with 2002-05 we both were into amateur radio. He had a handheld digital scanner that could be setup to listen into the digital trunking & encryption of the time. he did have local & provincial police programmed into the receiver. Can't remember what model it was now but it did work. listented to it at his place a number of times.
  • Last month, I was grading Amateur Radio exams in the U.S. One of our graders stated that she needed a new emergency scanner for her new (additional) vehicle. Sitting at the table with us was the director of communications for our local emergency services. He looked her dead in the eye and said, "Don't bother getting one. In January of 2023, we are moving everything to both spread spectrum and it will be encrypted." About the only thing to listen to now is the businesses that still run radios in their fleet vehicles.
  • @MichaelOfRohan
    Jumped on channel 21 on an old cobra walkie I found in tbe garage and happened upon an engaging conversation about underground poker rings. I was surprised, there was only 2 people talking but I could hear them really clearly and god knows where they were or what they were doing. Intercivilian radio will make a comeback. Its just too convenient and the knowledge gained is just as useful because the tech never really changed it just evolved.
  • NICE ONE. Can hear the audio change thru the years. All the very best. :-)
  • @ZadenZane
    My memory of analogue cordless phones was that they broadcast on ordinary radio frequencies, usually on mediumwave and you could just tune in on any radio, which was hardly confidential!
  • @samglaim4274
    Great video Lewis. Many thanks for all the work you put into producing the info in the video. Nice one! 73