Added Info POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS May 1989 (v.7#9) pg. 6
A listing of radio frequencies used by federal, state and local law enforcement agencies in South Florida (Dade and Broward Counties).
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS May 1989 (v.7#9) pg. 14
Scanning the bandido band. Using your scanner to listen in on radio pirates operating in the 30 to 50 MHz frequencies.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Jun 1989 (v.7#10) pg. 14
Tips on modifying the Realistic PRO-2004 and PRO-2021 scanners to receive more bands.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Sep 1989 (v.8#1) pg. 6
Living with the Realistic PRO-2005 scanner. How to adapt this scanner for mobile use.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Oct 1989 (v.8#2) pg. 28
How walls have ears. Using a scanner to eavesdrop on wireless intercoms, baby monitors, and similar low-power FM devices.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Jan 1990 (v.8#5) pg. 29
Scanning tricks of the trade. How to receive radio signals in "impossible" locations. Passive repeaters, radiating coax, and other exotic devices.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Nov 1990 (v.9#3) pg. 34
Adapt a scanner to eliminate the annoying 2kHz pilot tone when listening to mobile phone frequencies (454 MHz).
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Apr 1993 (v.11#8) pg. 28
The tape-H trick. Shortcut to recording and logging frequencies. By aiming a camcorder at the frequency readout of your scanner and plugging the earphone output into a VCR's audio input, you can record six hours (or more) worth of scanner audio accompanied by frequency information.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Apr 1994 (v.12#8) pg. 12
Scanner soup-ups. How to upgrade some older scanners to use an AM detector, receive SSB, handle inverted speech, etc.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Sep 1994 (v.13#1) pg. 28
How to get the most out of scanning. Tips on selecting a scanner and antenna.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Feb 1995 (v.13#6) pg. 42
A traveling scanner. Advice on selecting a portable, battery-operated handheld scanner.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Oct 1995 (v.14#2) pg. 42
Using radio scanners while flying on commercial aircraft. Some tips.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Nov 1995 (v.14#3) pg. 42
VHF/UHF scanning monitors. A comprehensive buying guide.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Feb 1974 (v.5#2) pg. 47
Plug-in accessory upgrades a pocket scanner by adding power-supply protection, backup power, trickle charging and other features.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Oct 1982 (v.20#10) pg. 75
Build the auto scan which is connected between a scanner and a cassette recorder. When an audio signal is detected, the recorder is activated.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Aug 1989 (v.6#8) pg. 59
Scanner Companion eliminates the annoying hiss between messages.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Jun 1991 (v.8#6) pg. 39
Build the scanner silencer. A carrier-operated switching circuit eliminates the squealing and howling feedback that's caused by scanner-transceiver interaction. Mutes the scanner audio whenever you are transmitting.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Sep 1994 (v.11#9) pg. 73
Build the scanner converter which down-converts signals in the 800- to 950-MHz band so that an ordinary scanner can receive them between 400 and 550 MHz. Est. cost: $50 (kit).
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Nov 1995 (v.12#11) pg. 39
Choosing the right scanner for your needs and budget.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Jun 1996 (v.13#6) pg. 42
DTMF computer interface. Decode DTMF tones picked up by your scanner and display that information on your computer screen (or save it to memory) with this simple scanner-to-computer interface circuit.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Apr 1999 (v.16#4) pg. 31
Computer CB scanner. Use your Commodore C64, SX64 or C128 computer to monitor up to 40 CB channels and display a bar graph showing the level of activity. Requires construction of an interface circuit between computer and CB radio.
RADIO-ELECTRONICS Sep 1986 (v.57#9) pg. 7 (ComputerDigest)
Scanner converter. Upgrade your scanner to receive signals in the 800-900 or 900-1000 MHz bands. Est. cost: $68 (kit). Part 1. Circuitry.
RADIO-ELECTRONICS Feb 1992 (v.63#2) pg. 42
Scanner converter. Part 2. Construction.
RADIO-ELECTRONICS Mar 1992 (v.63#3) pg. 41