Your scanner automatically
rounds the entered frequency
down to the closest valid fre-
quency. For example, if you
enter a frequency of 151.473,
your scanner accepts it as
151.470.
Press
DELAY/
scanner to pause 2 seconds
on this channel before it
proceeds to the next channel
after a transmission ends (see
"Delay" on Page 33). The
scanner also stores this
setting in the channel.
To program the next channel in
sequence, press
Steps 2 and 3.
5'#4%*+0)"6*'"
10'"617%*"$#0-5
Your scanner contains groups of
preset frequencies called One
Touch Banks. Each one touch
bank is associated with a specific
activity (see "One Touch Banks"
on Page 20). You can search for
marine, fire/police, air, ham, and
weather transmissions even if you
do not know the specific frequen-
cies that are used in your area. ±
The fire/police and ham one touch
banks have separate groups of
frequencies called sub-banks .
This lets you search for and select
only those frequencies that fall
within a specific range within the
fire/police and ham one-touch
banks. ±
To listen to the marine bank, see
"Listening to the Marine Bank" on
´
if you want the
and repeat
PGM
±
"016'"
Storing Known
Frequencies Into
Channels
• If you entered a
frequency that is
already stored in
another channel,
the scanner beeps
three times while
displaying the
lowest channel
number where the
frequency is already
stored, then
then the frequency
you entered flash
on the display. To
store the frequen-
cy anyway, press
ENT again. Press
TUNE/CLEAR to
clear the
frequency.
Searching the
One Touch Banks
• You can use the
scanner's delay
feature while
searching the
banks (see "Delay"
on Page 33).
• The fire/police
one-touch bank
contains low VHF,
high VHF, and
UHF sub-banks.
The ham one-
touch bank
contains 10m, 6m,
2m, and 70cm
sub-banks.
±
"
#ZKFB
#ZKFB
#ZKFB
#ZKFB
-
25