Difference between revisions of "Discriminator output"
From The RadioReference Wiki
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* See here for a list of discriminator output locations for many popular scanners - courtesy of Bill Cheek | * See here for a list of discriminator output locations for many popular scanners - courtesy of Bill Cheek | ||
* See this document from Greg Knox regarding instructions on how to tap the discriminator output on the BC-895 Scanner. See this picture for the location of the discriminator output on the 895. | * See this document from Greg Knox regarding instructions on how to tap the discriminator output on the BC-895 Scanner. See this picture for the location of the discriminator output on the 895. | ||
− | * See Bill Cheeks SCANDATA.FAQ listed at the bottom of the page for detailed instructions on how to tap the discriminator in your scanner. | + | * See Bill Cheeks [[SCANDATA.FAQ]] listed at the bottom of the page for detailed instructions on how to tap the discriminator in your scanner. |
Revision as of 12:20, 6 March 2005
The Discriminator output from a scanner is the raw, unfiltered signal that a scanner produces before it is sent to the audio stage for output through the speaker -- also called the "baseband audio." This discriminator source is required for all of the applications featured by this page. Most scanners must have a simple modification made to them to output the discriminator audio output to the interfaces outlined on this page.
- See here for a list of discriminator output locations for many popular scanners - courtesy of Bill Cheek
- See this document from Greg Knox regarding instructions on how to tap the discriminator output on the BC-895 Scanner. See this picture for the location of the discriminator output on the 895.
- See Bill Cheeks SCANDATA.FAQ listed at the bottom of the page for detailed instructions on how to tap the discriminator in your scanner.