bondbenz007 wrote:
Haha I see where that comes off as bad, but what I really was implying was about the rebanding topic. I know that going digital is on the horizon, so I was wondering if digital receivers had come out yet. But thanks for the law lesson :wink:
To clarify, there are many "digital" modes that are used across the spectrum you wish to hear.
So to ask "can I receive digital" is akin to "how many stars are in the sky".
P25 Digital is the mode that is predominantly used in Public Safety. There are several digital modes emerging for private sector business use, including Moneyrola's "MotoTRBO", and the Kenwood / ICOM IDAS / NXDN. I think there is a digital mode available for Ericsson EDACS (now MA/COM / Tyco owned). There is also Tetra (actually 2 different modes using the Tetra designation), is Open Sky digital? I don't know.
Then there is D-Star for amateur radio. Also there is Alinco's Digital mode for ham, and there is a modem being sold for use in Amateur HF that is digital as well, bloody expensive if you ask me ($500+ per end).
And then there is digital Cellular, of which there are actually many different modes, iDen, GSM, etc... - which as mentioned is unlawful to listen to.
The point here is, yeah, there are scanners out there that can listen to *some* digital, mostly P25. But to ask "can I receive digital" is a rather generic question.
You may as well ask how many fish are in the sea.
Not to mention that, there are not any "scanners" that can decode more than one or 2 of all of the modes listed above.
If you have deeper pockets than me, you *could* purchase a Service Monitor / Test Set that will get you a few more modes - even including a few of the ever elusive cell modes. But that is a little hard core if you ask me. If you google around or look at ebay, you will see this kind of gear regularly runs $20K and up - way up.
As for "rebanding" - that is independant of digital modes. As another person posted previously, there is not really a whole lot of digital in this area. And the stuff you really want to hear - many of us here would like to hear - is typically encrypted.
Happy hunting!