Difference between revisions of "BC100"
From The RadioReference Wiki
m |
m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:BC100_BEARCAT.jpg|right|A well-used BC100]] The Bearcat '''BC100''' was produced by Uniden predecessor Electra. It was the first hand-held, programmable radio scanner. The unit covered 30-50, 138-174, and 406-512 MHz. Sixteen memory channels were provided as well as a search function. Individual channels could be locked out during scan. Delay was fixed at 2 seconds for all channels. | [[Image:BC100_BEARCAT.jpg|right|A well-used BC100]] The Bearcat '''BC100''' was produced by Uniden predecessor Electra. It was the first hand-held, programmable radio scanner. The unit covered 30-50, 138-174, and 406-512 MHz. Sixteen memory channels were provided as well as a search function. Individual channels could be locked out during scan. Delay was fixed at 2 seconds for all channels. | ||
− | Initial units had a screw-in antenna and a bottom battery cap that was held in by plastic tabs. | + | Initial units had a screw-in antenna and a bottom battery cap that was held in by plastic tabs. Models produced from mid-1982 onwards had a BNC antenna connection and a battery cap (and top cap) that was attached with screws. |
Units were produced from 1981-1984(?). | Units were produced from 1981-1984(?). |
Revision as of 23:23, 17 January 2022
The Bearcat BC100 was produced by Uniden predecessor Electra. It was the first hand-held, programmable radio scanner. The unit covered 30-50, 138-174, and 406-512 MHz. Sixteen memory channels were provided as well as a search function. Individual channels could be locked out during scan. Delay was fixed at 2 seconds for all channels.
Initial units had a screw-in antenna and a bottom battery cap that was held in by plastic tabs. Models produced from mid-1982 onwards had a BNC antenna connection and a battery cap (and top cap) that was attached with screws.
Units were produced from 1981-1984(?).
Manual PDF download Operation manual
Return to Wiki page: Uniden Scanners
(No matching DB page)