GRE PSR-200U User manual

1
PSR-200U
200-Channel plus 20 FM Channel VHF/Air/UHF Desktop Scanner
Please read this user's guide before installing, setting up and using your
new product.
Owner’s Manual
PSR200U-OM.indd 1 2010/02/22 16:24:41

2
CONTENTS
Features .........................................................................................................................4
Preparation .....................................................................................................................8
Power Sources ...............................................................................................................8
Using AC Power .............................................................................................................8
Using Vehicle Battery Power ..........................................................................................8
Connecting the Supplied Antenna ................................................................................9
Connecting an Outdoor Antenna ..................................................................................9
Connecting an Earphone/Headphones.........................................................................9
Listening Safely ............................................................................................................10
Connecting an Extension Speaker ..............................................................................10
About Your Scanner .....................................................................................................11
About the Keypad ........................................................................................................11
A Look at the Display ...................................................................................................13
Understanding Channel Storage Banks ......................................................................16
FM Radio Channels .....................................................................................................16
Service Search Banks ..................................................................................................16
Operation .....................................................................................................................19
Understanding 3 Modes ..............................................................................................19
Turning On the Scanner/Setting Volume and Squelch ...............................................19
Storing Known Frequencies into Channels .................................................................20
Finding and Storing Active Frequencies .....................................................................20
Searching the Service Search Band ............................................................................20
Using Tune ...................................................................................................................21
Copying a Frequency into a Vacant Channel in a Specified Bank .............................22
Copying a Frequency into a Specified Channel ..........................................................22
Scanning the Stored Channels ....................................................................................23
Turning Channel-Storage Banks Off and On ...............................................................23
Monitoring a Stored Channel .......................................................................................24
Clearing a Stored Channel ..........................................................................................24
FM Radio Operation .....................................................................................................24
Monitoring Stored FM Radio Channel .........................................................................25
Listening to the Marine Bank .......................................................................................25
Listening to the Weather Band ....................................................................................26
Listening to a Weather Channel...................................................................................26
SAME Standby Mode ...................................................................................................27
Skywarn........................................................................................................................28
PSR200U-OM.indd 2 2010/02/22 16:24:41

3
Special Features ..........................................................................................................29
Using CTCSS and DCS ...............................................................................................29
Searching CTCSS/DCS Code .....................................................................................29
Programming CTCSS/DCS Code Search Setting into Channel Memory...................29
Programming CTCSS/DCS Code into Channel Memory............................................30
Delay ............................................................................................................................30
Locking Out Channels or Frequencies ........................................................................31
Locking Out Channels .................................................................................................31
Locking Out Marine Channels .....................................................................................31
Locking Out Frequencies .............................................................................................32
Reviewing Locked-Out Frequencies ............................................................................32
Removing Lockouts From All Frequencies in a Service Search Band .......................32
Using Priority ................................................................................................................32
Turning the Key Tone On and Off ................................................................................33
Cloning the Programmed Data ....................................................................................34
Initializing the Scanner .................................................................................................34
Birdie Frequencies .......................................................................................................35
Frequency Conversion .................................................................................................35
FAQs .............................................................................................................................36
Care ..............................................................................................................................36
In Case of Fault ............................................................................................................36
Specifications ...............................................................................................................37
What's Included
• PSR-200U Scanner
• Telescoping Antenna
• AC Adaptor
• User's Guide
PSR200U-OM.indd 3 2010/02/22 16:24:42

4
FEATURES
Your new PSR-200U 200 Channel plus 20 FM channels VHF/Air/UHF
Desktop Scanner lets you scan conventional transmissions, and is
preprogrammed with search banks for convenience. You press a FM RADIO
key, you can quickly listen to the local broadcast stations.
This scanner gives you direct access to over 24,000 exciting frequencies,
including those used by police and fire departments, ambulance services,
aircraft, and amateur radio services, and you can change your selection at
any time.
Your scanner also has these special features:
Service Search Bands — let you search preset frequencies in separate
marine, fire/police, aircraft, and ham banks, to make it easy to locate specific
types of calls.
FM Radio — lets you receive FM broadcast for your local area.
Display Backlight — makes the scanner easy to read in low-light situations.
Lockout Function — lets you set your scanner to skip over specified
channels or frequencies when scanning or searching.
Ten Channel-Storage Banks — you can store 20 channels in each bank (200
total channels), letting you group channels so you can more easily identify
calls.
Tune — lets you tune for new and unlisted frequencies starting from a
specified frequency.
SAME/FIPS Weather Alert — displays the weather event for the specific
cities or counties you choose so you can hear the alert tone.
Memory Backup — keeps the frequencies stored in memory for an
extended time during a power loss.
Scan Delay — delays scanning for about 2 seconds before moving to
another channel, so you can hear more replies that are transmitted on the
same channel.
Priority Channel — lets you set the scanner to check one channel every 2
seconds so you do not miss transmissions.
Tone Squelch (CTCSS and DCS) — decodes and displays the CTCSS or
DCS tone signal.
Data Cloning — lets you transfer the programmed data to another PSR-
200U scanner.
Liquid-Crystal Display — makes it easy to view and change programming
information.
PSR200U-OM.indd 4 2010/02/22 16:24:42

5
Supplied Telescoping Antenna — provides good reception of strong local
signals.
External Antenna Connector — lets you connect an external antenna (not
supplied) with a BNC connector to the scanner for improved reception of
distant/weaker signals.
Your PSR-200U scanner can receive these bands:
Frequency Range Types of Transmissions
29–54 MHz 10-Meter Ham Band, VHF Lo, 6-Meter Ham Band
87.3–107.9 MHz FM broadcast
108–136.99166 MHz Aircraft
137–174 MHz Military Land Mobile, 2-Meter Ham Band, VHF Hi
380–512 MHz UHF Aircraft, Federal Government, 70-cm Ham
Band, UHF Standard Band, UHF “T” Band
Note: See “Specifications” on Page 37 for more information about the
scanner’s frequency steps.
PSR200U-OM.indd 5 2010/02/22 16:24:42

6
THE FCC WANT YOU TO KNOW
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a
scanning receiver, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are
designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in
a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate
radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the
instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular
installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or
television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off
and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or
more of the following measures:
• Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
• Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
• Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to
which the receiver is connected.
• Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
PSR200U-OM.indd 6 2010/02/22 16:24:42

7
SCANNING LEGALLY
Your scanner covers frequencies used by many different groups including
police and fire departments, ambulance services, government agencies,
private companies, amateur radio, military operations, pager services, and
wireline (telephone and telegraph) service providers. It is legal to listen to
almost every transmission you should never intentionally listen to. These
include:
• Telephone conversations (cellular, cordless, or other private means of
telephone signal transmission)
• Pager transmissions
• Any scrambled or encrypted transmissions
According to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), you are
subject to fines and possible imprisonment for intentionally listening to,
using, or divulging the contents of such a transmission unless you have the
consent of a party to the communication (unless such activity is otherwise
illegal).
This scan ner has been d esign ed to prevent recept ion of i lle gal
transmissions. This is done to comply with the legal requirement that
scanners be manufactured so as to not be easily modifiable to pick up those
transmissions. Do not open your scanner’s case to make any modifications
that could allow it to pick up transmissions that are illegal to monitor. Doing
so could subject you to legal penalties.
In some areas, mobile use of this scanner is unlawful or requires a permit.
Check the laws in your area. It is also illegal in many areas to interfere with
the duties of public safety officials by traveling to the scene of an incident
without authorization.
We encourage responsible, safe and legal scanner use.
PSR200U-OM.indd 7 2010/02/22 16:24:42

8
PREPARATION
POWER SOURCES
USING AC POWER
You can power the scanner using a supplied AC adaptor.
Cautions:
! You must use a supplied AC adaptor.
• Always connect the AC adaptor to the scanner before you connect it to
AC power. When you finish, disconnect the adaptor from AC power before
you disconnect it from the scanner.
• The correct orientation for the enclosed power adaptor is in a vertical or
floor-mount position.
• Plug the adaptor into an easily accessible power outlet located near the
equipment.
To power the scanner using an AC adaptor, connect the plug into the
scanner’s DC 9V jack. Then connect the AC adaptor to a standard AC outlet.
WARNING: To prevent electric shock, do not use the AC adaptor’s polarized
plug with an extension cord, receptacle, or other outlet unless you can fully
insert the blades to prevent blade exposure.
USING VEHICLE BATTERY POWER
You can power the scanner from a vehicle’s 12V power source (such as
cigarette-lighter socket) using a 9VDC at least 400 mA adaptor with 4.75mm
outer/1.7mm inner plug. Its centre tip must be set to positive and its plug
must fit the scanner's DC 9V jack. Using an adaptor that does not meet
these specifications could damage the scanner or the adaptor.
Cautions: Always connect the DC adaptor to the scanner before you
connect it to the power source. When you finish, disconnect the adaptor
from the power source before you disconnect it from the scanner.
To power the scanner using a DC adaptor, connect the plug into the
scanner’s DC 9V jack. Plug the other end of the DC adaptor into your
vehicle’s cigarette-lighter socket.
Note: If you use a cigarette-lighter DC 9V adaptor and your vehicle’s engine
is running, you might hear electrical noise from the engine while scanning.
This is normal.
PSR200U-OM.indd 8 2010/02/22 16:24:42

9
CONNECTING THE SUPPLIED ANTENNA
You must install an antenna before you can operate the scanner.
The supplied telescoping antenna helps your scanner receive strong local
signals. To install the antenna, thread it clockwise into the hole on top of the
scanner.
The scanner’s sensitivity depends on its location and the antenna’s length.
For the best reception of the transmissions you want to hear, adjust the
antenna’s length according to the chart below.
Frequency Antenna Length
29-174 MHz Extend fully
380-512 MHz Extend 2 segments
Connecting an Outdoor Antenna
The antenna connector on your scanner makes it easy to use the scanner
with a variety of antennas, such as an external mobile antenna or outdoor
base station antenna.
Always use 50 Ohm coaxial cable, such as RG-58 or RG-8, to connect an
outdoor antenna. For lengths over 50 feet, use RG-8 low-loss dielectric
coaxial cable. If the antenna cable’s connector does not have a BNC
connector, you will also need a BNC adaptor.
Follow the installation instructions supplied with the antenna, route the
antenna cable to the scanner, then connect it to the antenna jack.
CONNECTING AN EARPHONE/HEADPHONES
For private listening, you can plug an 1/8-inch (3.5-mm) mini-plug earphone
or headphones (not supplied), into the jack on the back of the scanner.
This automatically disconnects the internal speaker.
Warning: Use extreme caution when you installing or removing an
outdoor antenna. If the antenna starts to fall, let it go! It could contact
overhead power lines. If the antenna touches a power line, contact
with the antenna, mast, cable, or guy wires can cause electrocution
and death. Call the power company to remove the antenna. DO NOT
attempt to do so yourself.
PSR200U-OM.indd 9 2010/02/22 16:24:42

10
Listening Safely
To protect your hearing, follow these guidelines when you use an earphone
or headphones.
• Set the volume to the lowest setting before you begin listening. After you
begin listening, adjust the volume to a comfortable level.
• Do not listen at extremely high volume levels. Extended high-volume
listening can lead to permanent hearing loss.
• Once you set the volume, do not increase it. Over time, your ears adapt to
the volume level, so a volume level that does not cause discomfort might
still damage your hearing.
Traffic Safety
Do not wear an earphone or headphones with your scanner when operating
a motor vehicle or riding a bicycle in or near traffic. Doing so can create a
traffic hazard and could be illegal in some areas.
If you use an earphone or headphones with your scanner while riding a
bicycle, be very careful. Do not listen to a continuous transmission. Even
though some earphones and headphones let you hear some outside sounds
when you listen at normal levels, they still can present a traffic hazard.
CONNECTING AN EXTENSION SPEAKER
In a noisy area, an extension speaker (not supplied) might provide more
comfortable listening. Plug the speaker cable’s 1/8-inch (3.5 mm) mini-plug
into your scanner’s jack.
Note: You must use an amplified speaker with this scanner. Non-amplified
speakers do not provide sufficient volume for comfortable listening.
PSR200U-OM.indd 10 2010/02/22 16:24:42

11
ABOUT YOUR SCANNER
Once you understand a few simple terms used in this manual and familiarize
yourself with your scanner’s features, you can put the scanner to work for
you. You simply determine the type of communications you want to receive,
then set the scanner to scan them.
A frequency is the receiving signal location (expressed in kHz or MHz). To
find active frequencies, you can use the search or tune function.
When you find a frequency, you can store it into a programmable memory
location called a channel, which is grouped with other channels in a
channel-storage bank. You can then scan the channel-storage banks to see
if there is activity on the frequencies stored there. Each time the scanner
finds an active frequency, it stays on that channel until the transmission
ends.
ABOUT THE KEYPAD
Here is a brief overview of your scanner’s keys and their functions.
SCAN (Orange) — Lets you scan or manual operation the scanner’s
channel memory.
FM RADIO (Orange) — Lets you tune the local FM broadcast, or manual
operation the scanner’s FM Radio channels.
SRCH (Orange) — Searches the scanner’s preprogrammed search bands.
MAN/SCAN (Blue) — Lets you scan or manual operation the scanner’s
channels (or FM Radio channels) while SCAN (or FM RADIO mode).
TUNE (Blue) — Lets you tune the frequency along with 5 or 6.
PSR200U-OM.indd 11 2010/02/22 16:24:42

12
WX (Blue)/ — Lets you search the scanner’s preprogrammed 7 weather
channels; directly accesses skywarn channel.
FUNC — Lets you use various functions by pressing this key in combination
with other keys.
5 / 6 — Searches up or down for active frequencies or selects the direction
when scanning channels.
CT/DC — The scanner decodes the CTCSS or DCS code, or program
CTCSS/DCS code.
PRI — Sets and turns the priority function on or off.
Number Keys — Each key has single-digit (0 to 9) and a range of numbers.
Use the range of numbers above the key (21–40 for example) to select the
channel in a channel-storage bank.
DELAY /• — Programs a 2-second delay for the selected channel; enters a
decimal point.
ENT (enter) — Enters frequencies into channels.
L/O RVW/L/O — Reviews locked-out frequencies; lets you lock out selected
channels or frequencies.
PSE/CLEAR — Stops or restarts search or tune; Clears an incorrect entry.
PGM — Programs frequencies into channels.
PSR200U-OM.indd 12 2010/02/22 16:24:42

13
A LOOK AT THE DISPLAY
The display has indicators that show the scanner’s current operating status.
This quick look at the display will help you understand how your scanner
operates.
— Appears when you hear the skywarn channel.
FD/PD — Indicates that the scanner is active for fire/police bank.
BANK — Appears with numbers (1–10) to indicate the scan bank or service
search sub-bank. Bank numbers with a bar under them show which banks
are turned on for scanning (see “Understanding Channel Storage Banks”
and "Searvice Search Banks" on Page 16).
AIR — Indicates that the scanner is active for aircraft bank.
HAM — Indicates that the scanner is active for amateur radio bank.
WX — Indicates that the scanner is active for weather channels.
MAR — Indicates that the scanner is active for marine bank.
FM Radio — Appears when you listen FM broadcast.
CH — Appears with digits (1–200) or P to show which channel the scanner
is tuned to.
7-Digit number — Indicates receiving frequency, error messages, etc.
L/O (lockout) — Appears when you manually select a channel that was
previously locked out during scanning or when you review a locked-out
frequency.
DCS — Appears when your scanner decodes DCS code.
CTCSS — Appears when your scanner decodes CTCSS code.
5/6 — Indicates the search or scan direction.
PRI — Appears when the priority feature is turned on.
MAN — Appears when you manually select a channel.
SCAN — Appears when the scanner scans channels.
SRCH — Appears when the scanner searches during service search band.
FD/PD BANK
12345678910
AIR HAM
MAR
DCS
CTCSS
PGM DLY
SRCH
SCAN
MAN
PRI
WX
FM Radio CH
PSR200U-OM.indd 13 2010/02/22 16:24:42

14
S — Appears with 8-digit bar that shows receiving signal strength.
PGM — Appears when you program frequencies into the scanner’s
channels.
DLY — Appears when you program a 2-second delay.
ALL CH L-out — Appears when you lock out the all marine channels.
-b- — Appears during service search (Fire/Police, Aircraft and Ham band)
b X Ch-FULL — Appears when you try to enter a frequency during a search
when all displayed bank’s channels are full.
b X StorE — Appears when you program the frequency into desired vacant
channel.
CLOnE — Appears when the scanner stays in the clone mode.
-dUPL- — Appears when you try to store a frequency that is already stored
in another channel.
Error — Appears when you make an entry error.
Func — Appears when you press FUNC key to use various functions.
FLo ALL-CL — Appears when you remove all the locked-out frequencies
during a FD/PD, AIR, or HAM band.
L-r — Appears when you review the locked-out frequencies.
L-r EMPty — Appears when the locked-out frequency is empty in the search/
tune.
L-O Fr-FULL — Appears when you try to lock out a frequency during a
search/tune when 100 frequencies are already locked out.
oFF tonE — Appears when you turn the key tone off.
On tonE — Appears when you turn the key tone on.
P — Appears when the scanner is tuned to the priority channel.
PSE — Appears when the scanner pauses the search/tune.
-t- — Appears during a tune mode.
MAr — Appears about 2 seconds when you select marine band.
FIrE — Appears about 1 second when you select FD/PD band.
POLICE — Appears about 1 second when you select FD/PD band.
AIr — Appears about 2 seconds when you select AIR band.
HAM — Appears about 2 seconds when you select HAM band.
PSR200U-OM.indd 14 2010/02/22 16:24:42

15
WEAthEr — Appears about 2 seconds when you select weather band.
Lo VHF — Appears when you turn on the low VHF sub-bank while fire/police
bank searching.
Hi VHF — Appears when you turn on the high VHF sub-bank while fire/
police bank searching.
UHF — Appears when you turn on the UHF sub-bank while fire/police bank
searching.
10 M — Appears when you turn on the 10m sub-bank 1 while HAM bank
searching.
6 M — Appears when you turn on the 6m sub-bank 2 while HAM bank
searching.
2 M — Appears when you turn on the 2m sub-bank 3 while HAM bank
searching.
70CM — Appears when you turn on the 70cm sub-bank 4 while HAM bank
searching.
PSR200U-OM.indd 15 2010/02/22 16:24:42

16
Understanding Channel-Storage Banks
A bank is a storage area for a group of channels. Channels are storage
areas for frequencies. Whereas a channel can only contain one frequency, a
bank can hold numerous channels.
To make it easier to identify and select the channels you want to listen to,
your scanner divides the channels into 10 banks (1 to 10) of 20 channels
each, a total of 200 channels. You can use each channel-storage bank
to group frequencies, such as those used by the police department, fire
department, ambulance services, or aircraft.
For example, a police department might use four frequencies, one for
each side of town. You could program the police frequencies starting with
Channel 1 (the first channel in bank 1) and program the fire department
frequencies starting with Channel 21 (the first channel in bank 2).
FM Radio Channels
This scanner has another channel memory location, called FM Radio
channel. These channels are able to use only FM Radio mode. You can
program 20 broadcast stations into FM Radio channel.
Service Search Banks
The scanner is preprogrammed with the frequencies allocated by marine,
fire/police, aircraft, and ham radio services. This is handy for quickly
finding active frequencies instead of searching through an entire band (see
“Searching the Service Search Band on Page 20).
Note: The frequencies in the scanner’s service banks are preset. You cannot
change them.
PSR200U-OM.indd 16 2010/02/22 16:24:42

17
Marine
Channel Frequency (MHz) Chhannel Frequency (MHz)
01 156.0500 63 156.1750
05 156.2500 64 156.2250
06 156.3000 160.8250
07 156.3500 65 156.2750
08 156.4000 66 156.3250
09 156.4500 67 156.3750
10 156.5000 68 156.4250
11 156.5500 69 156.4750
12 156.6000 70 156.5250
13 156.6500 71 156.5750
14 156.7000 72 156.6250
15 156.7500 73 156.6750
16 156.8000 74 156.7250
17 156.8500 77 156.8750
18 156.9000 78 156.9250
19 156.9500 79 156.9750
20 157.0000 80 157.0250
161.6000 81 157.0750
21 157.0500 82 157.1250
22 157.1000 83 157.1750
23 157.1500 84 157.2250
24 157.2000 161.8250
161.8000 85 157.2750
25 157.2500 161.8750
161.8500 86 157.3250
26 157.3000 161.9250
161.9000 87 157.3750
27 157.3500 161.9750
161.9500 88 157.4250
28 157.4000
162.0000
Note: Both frequencies (transmission and reception) are shown for marine
channels used for duplex transmission.
PSR200U-OM.indd 17 2010/02/22 16:24:43

18
Fire/Police
Group Frequency Range (MHz) Step (kHz)
1 33.420-33.980 20
37.020-37.420 20
39.020-39.980 20
42.020-42.940 20
44.620-45.860 40
45.880 -
45.900-46.060 40
46.080-46.500 20
2 153.770-154.130 60
154.145-154.445 15
154.650-154.950 15
155.010-155.370 60
155.415-155.700 15
155.730-156.210 60
158.730-159.210 60
166.250 -
170.150 -
3 453.0375-453.9625 12.5
458.0375-458.9625 12.5
460.0125-460.6375 12.5
465.0125-465.6375 12.5
Air
Group Frequency Range (MHz) Step (kHz)
1 108.000-118.000 8.33
2 118.00833-136.99166 8.33
Amateur Radio
Group Frequency Range (MHz) Step (kHz)
1 29.000-29.700 5
2 50.000-54.000 5
3 144.000-148.000 5
4 420.000-450.000 12.5
PSR200U-OM.indd 18 2010/02/22 16:24:43

19
OPERATION
UNDERSTANDING 3 MODES
Your PSR-200U has three kinds of modes, and changes the mode by
pressing an orange key.
• Scan/Manual mode
• FM Radio mode
• Service Search mode
If you press SCAN (Orange) key, your PSR-200U scanner enters SCAN/
MANUAL mode. The SCAN/MANUAL mode is a mode to which the
programmed channel memory is scanned. Or you can manually tuning the
channel memory.
If you press FM RADIO (Orange) key, the scanner enters FM RADIO mode.
FM RADIO mode is a mode to receive FM broadcast. You can use tune
operation or manually FM-Radio channel selection.
If you press SRCH (Orange) key, the scanner enters Service Search mode.
The Service Search mode is a mode that searches for the preprogrammed
service search band.
TURNING ON THE SCANNER/SETTING VOLUME AND
SQUELCH
1. Turn SQUELCH until the indicator points to MIN before you turn on the
scanner.
2. To turn on the scanner, slide POWER to ON.
3. Turn VOLUME clockwise until you hear a hissing sound.
4. Turn SQUELCH clockwise, just until the hissing sound stops.
Notes:
• To listen to a weak or distant station, turn SQUELCH counterclockwise.
If reception is poor, turn SQUELCH clockwise to cut out weak
transmissions.
• If SQUELCH is adjusted so you always hear a hissing sound, the scanner
will not scan or search properly.
5. To turn off the scanner when you finish, slide POWER to OFF.
PSR200U-OM.indd 19 2010/02/22 16:24:43

20
STORING KNOWN FREQUENCIES INTO CHANNELS
Follow these steps to store frequencies into channels.
1. Press SCAN (Orange).
Note: If you want to program FM broadcast into channel, press FM RADIO.
2. Press PGM, then PGM appears. Enter the channel number (1–200; If you
enter FM RADIO mode, 1-20) where you want to store a frequency, then
press PGM again.
3. Use the number keys and • to enter the frequency (including the decimal
point) you want to store.
4. Press ENT to store the frequency into the channel.
Notes:
• If you made a mistake in Step 3, Error appears and the scanner beeps
three times when you press ENT. Simply start again from Step 3.
• Your scanner automatically rounds the entered frequency down to the
closest valid frequency. For example, if you enter a frequency of 151.451,
your scanner accepts it as 151.450.
• If you entered a frequency that is already stored in another channel, the
scanner beeps three times and displays the lowest channel number
where the frequency is already stored, and –dUPL– appears. If you want
to store the frequency anyway, press ENT again. Press CLEAR/PSE to
clear the frequency.
• Press DELAY if you want the scanner to pause 2 seconds on this channel
before it proceeds to the next channel after a transmission ends (see
“Delay” on Page 30). The scanner also stores this setting in the channel.
5. To program the next channel in sequence, press PGM and repeat Steps 3
and 4.
FINDING AND STORING ACTIVE FREQUENCIES
Searching the Service Search Band
You can search for transmissions in the scanner’s preprogrammed search
bank. The search bank is divided into four search bands.
PSR200U-OM.indd 20 2010/02/22 16:24:43
Table of contents
Other GRE Scanner manuals