Uniden America UB317 User Manual

Precautions
Before you use thisscanner, please observethe following:
WARNING!
Uniden America Corporationdoesnot representthis unitto be waterproof.Toreducethe riskof fire, electricalshock, or damageto the unit,do not exposethis unitto rainor moisture.
IMPORTANT!
Changes or modifications to this product not expressly approved by Uniden, or operation of this product in any way other than as detailed by this Operating Guide, could void your authority to operate this product.
May be covered under one or more of the following U.S. patent: 4,627,100 4,841,302 4,888,815 4,932,074 4,947,456 5,014,348 5,199,109 5,408,692 5,428,826 5,438,688 5,448,256 5,465,402 5,471,660 5,483,684 5,530,296 5,548,832 5,551,071 5,574,995 5,577,076 5,598,430 5,600,223 5,642,424 5,710,992 5,896,422 5,991,346 5,991,603 6,012,158 6,025,758 6,034,573 6,064,270 6,266,521
** U.S. Patent Number 4,841,302 is licensed from Gray Electronics, Inc. ** These products contain Uniden proprietary information. Software, control codes, protocols and other such related matter may be the copyrighted work of Uniden America Corporation. © Copyright 2002-2003, Uniden America Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
© 2003 Uniden. This product contains Uniden proprietary information. Software, control codes, protocols and other such related matter may be the copyrighted work of Uniden America Corporation. Printed in China
Uniden ® is a registered trademark of Uniden America Corporation. Bearcat ® is a registered trademark of Uniden America Corporation.
Table of Contents
About Your New BC350C ......................................................1
What is Scanning? ................................................................2
Types of Communication....................................................2
What is Searching?................................................................3
What is Trunk Tracking? ......................................................4
Where to Obtain More Information ......................................5
Information on the Internet ................................................5
Included with Your Scanner Package ..................................6
Optional Accessories..........................................................6
Summary of Features ............................................................7
Installing the BC350C ............................................................8
For Home Use (Desktop Installation) ................................8
For Mobile Use (In-Car Installation) ..................................8
Controls and Functions ......................................................10
Screens ............................................................................15
Scanning Overview ..............................................................17
Getting Started ................................................................17
Turn the Scanner On........................................................17
Adjusting the Squelch ......................................................18
Scanning ..............................................................................19
Weather Channel Scan ....................................................19
Channel Lock Out ............................................................20
Band Search ........................................................................22
Displaying the band range ..............................................22
Programming Frequencies..................................................24
Programming from SCAN mode ......................................25
Programming from SEARCH mode..................................26
Deleting a programmed frequency
(programming "000.0000") ............................................27
To find "000.0000" in Search Band 50 – 54:....................28
Program Lock Feature......................................................28
Helpful Hints ........................................................................29
Troubleshooting ..................................................................30
Technical Specifications ....................................................31
One Year Limited Warranty ................................................33
1
About Your New BC350C
The BC350C is not just a scanner. It is a brand new informa­tion radio with automatic scanning capabilities. The built-in Service Scan system brings you instantly into the exciting world of scanning action. Best of all, you dont even have to program the scanner to begin using it!
The BC350C comes with six Service banks for monitoring police, fire/emergency medical services, marine, air, weather, and CB frequencies. Not only that, theres even a fully pro­grammable bank for storing your own private collection of favorite frequencies.
With the BC350C, you can scan over 3,600 channels. In addi­tion, the BC350C has 13 separate band search capabilities for even greater scanning action.
Two Service Scan banks, POLICE and FIRE/EMS also have programmable. Channels to store additional police and Fire/EMS frequencies. So whenever you encounter a newly activated local frequency for either service category, you can add it to the bank for that category. This gives you quick access to the frequencies you want to hear.
So enjoy your BC350C!
2
What is Scanning?
Unlike standard AM or FM radio stations, most two-way com­munications (listed below) do not transmit continuously. The BC350C scans programmed channels at the rate of up to 100 channels per second until it locates an active frequency. When scanning stops on an active frequency, it remains on that channel as long as the transmission continues. When the transmission ends, the scanner stays on the channel for 2 more seconds, waiting for another transmission. If no response is detected, the scanning cycle resumes until anoth­er transmission is received.
Types of Communication
You will be able to monitor communication such as:
Police and fire departments (including rescue and para­medics)
NOAA weather broadcasts (8 pre-programmed channels)
Citizens Band (CB)
Business/industrial radio
Motion picture and press relay
Utility
Land transportation frequencies, such as trucking firms,
buses, taxis, tow trucks, and railroads
Marine and amateur (ham radio) bands
Air band
And many more in the 25-54 MHz, 108-174 MHz, and 406-
512, and 806-956
MHz ranges
Excluding Cellular Telephone Band
3
What is Searching?
The BC350C can search each of its 13 bands to find active frequencies. This is different from scanning because you are searching for frequencies that have not been programmed into your Scanners channels. The scanner automatically chooses between two speeds (Search and Turbo Search) while searching. During Search Mode the scanner will search 100 frequencies per second, while in Turbo Search Mode the scanner can achieve up to 300 frequencies per second in the VHF FM band.
4
What is Trunk Tracking?
Conventional scanning is a simple concept. You enter a radio frequency in your scanners memory which is used by some­one you want to monitor. For example, the police in your area may broadcast on 460.500 MHz, the fire department on
154.445 MHz, the highway department on 37.900 MHz, etc.
So when your scanner stops on a frequency, you usually know who it is, and more importantly, you can stop on a chan­nel and listen to an entire conversation. This type of scanning is easy and fun.
As the demand for public communications has increased, many public radio users don't have enough frequencies to meet their needs, and this has created a serious problem. Trunking radio systems have been implemented to.
In a trunked radio system the frequencies are shared among the police and fire departments and a computer systematically assigns available frequencies when they are needed for com­munications.
Sharing of the available public service frequencies, or trunk­ing, allows cities, counties, or other agencies to accommodate hundreds of users with relatively few frequencies. Following a conversation on a trunked system using a scanner is difficult, if not impossible. Because when there's a short break during the conversation you're monitoring, talkgroup will be assigned to a completely different frequency in the trunked system. If your local police, FIre and EMS agencies use a trunked sys­tem and you want to be able to follow their communications, you will want to purchase one of Unidens Trunk Trading Scanners.
5
Where to Obtain More Information
Before you can scan the PRIVATE bank, you must program the Police, Fire, EMS frequencies into the scanners channels. The Frequency Guide lists typical frequencies used around the U.S.A. and Canada that you may program into your new scanner. However, this is not a complete list of frequencies for your area.
To obtain frequency information for your area, contact one of the following:
Scanner Master 1 (800) Scanner (7226634) (Hours are from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time Monday through Friday.) frequenciew@scannermaster.co
To obtain another copy of the frequency guide, contact one of the following:
Uniden Parts Department (800) 554-3988 (Hours are from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Central Time Monday through Friday.)
Local Dealer
Information on the Internet
If you have access to the internet, you may want to visit one of the following websites for additional information:
scanner.uniden.com www.scannermaster.com
6
Included with Your Scanner
Package
BC350C Auto Scanner
Telescoping Antenna (Model AT-124)
Fixable Mobile Antenna (ANT-002)
AC Adapter (Model AD-140U)
Cigarette Lighter Adapter Plug (CO-007)
This Operating Guide
Registration Form
Frequency Guide
Other Printed Materials
If any of these items are missing or damaged, immediately contact your place of purchase or Uniden Customer Hotline at: 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Central Time, Monday through Friday.
Optional Accessories
The following optional accessories for your BC350C are avail­able from your local Uniden Dealer or through the Uniden Parts Department by calling: (800) 554-3988, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM CST, Monday through Friday. We can also be reached on the web at www.uniden.com.
Mobile Mounting Bracket (Model MB-007) – For mobile use (In-car Installation), use it to install the BC350C in your car.
DC Power Cord (Model PS-001) – For Hard wiring power from your car to your scanner.
Motorola Antenna Adapter (Model PLG-134) – Use only if your antenna has a Motorola type plug.
7
Summary of Features
The BC350C is a compact mobile/base scanner, and one of the most user friendly communication products available today.
The BC350C features:
Turbo search – Allows your BC350C to scan and search 300 channels or STEPS per second.
Seven Banks – Six pre-programmed Service banks and one standard, programmable Private bank. These banks include:
POLICE: 739 Factory programmed Police frequencies
with 30 open channels allowing you to program additional Police frequency int this bank.
FIRE/EMS: 197 Factory Programmed Fire/EMS
frequencies plus an additional 20 Open Channels for you to program local Fire/EMS frequencies into this bank.
AIR: 1,160 Factory programmed frequencies which
covers the complete AIR band, 108.000 to
136.975MHz.
MRN: 90 factory programmed frequencies which
cover the complete Marine band.
WX: 7 Factory programmed frequencies covering all
NOAA Weather Service Broadcasts.
CB: XXX Factory programmed frequencies covering
the CB communications.
PRIVATE: 50-channel, fully user-programmable bank.
13 Search Bands – Use the [BAND] key to select a band to search.
Band Frequency Coverage Steps Service
25 – 28 25.0000 to 27.9950 MHz 5 kHz CB/Business 28 – 30 28.0000 to 29.7000 MHz 5 kHz 10 Meter AAM 30 – 50 30.0000 to 49.9950 MHz 5 kHz VAF Low Band
50 – 54 50.0000 to 54.0000 MHz 5 kHz 6 Meter HAM 108 – 137 108.0000 to 136.9875 MHz 12.5 kHz AirCraft Band 137 – 144 137.0000 to 143.9950 MHz 5 kHz Military 144 – 148 144.0000 to 147.9950 MHz 5 kHz 2 Meter HAM 148 – 174 148.0000 to 174.0000 MHz 5 kHz VAF Hight Band 406 – 420 406.0000 to 419.9875 MHz 12.5 kHz
Federal Government 420 – 450 420.0000 to 449.9875 MHz 12.5 kHz 70 cm HAM 450 – 470 450.0000 to 469.9875 MHz 12.5 kHz UHF Band 470 – 512 470.0000 to 512.0000 MHz 12.5 kHz UHF TV Band 806 – 956 806.0000 to 823.9875 MHz 12.5 kHz "800" Band
849.0125 to 868.9875 MHz
894.0125 to 956.0000 MHz
Excluding cellular telephone band
8
Installing the BC350C
For Home Use (Desktop Installation)
1. Insert the DC plug end of the AC Adapter into the DC
13.8V jack on the rear panel.
2. Plug the AC Adapter into a standard 120V AC wall outlet.
Warning: Do not plug the AC Adapter into an outlet con­trolled by a wall switch. This could cause scanner memory loss.
3. Plug the Telescoping Antenna into the ANT connector. Extend the antenna to its full height. For frequencies higher than 406 MHz, shortening the antenna may improve the reception.
4. Use the desktop stand for a better viewing and operating angle.
Helpful Hints
If strong interference or electrical noise is received, relocate
the scanner or its antenna away from the source.
If you are operating the scanner in a fringe area or need to
improve reception, use an optional antenna designed for multi-band coverage. (You can purchase this type of anten­na at a local electronics store.)
If the optional antenna has no cable, use 50-70 ohm coaxial
cable for lead-in. A mating plug may be necessary for the optional antennas.
For Mobile Use (In-Car Installation)
Mounting the Radio for every day use
Installation for Temporary Use:
A Cigarette Lighter Power Cord is provided for easy, tempo­rary installation.
Warning: Do not use the cigarette lighter power cord in a positive ground vehicle.
Plug one end of the Cigarette Lighter Power Cord into the cig­arette lighter jack and the other end into the DC 13.8V jack on the back of the scanner.
9
Connecting the Antenna Plug
Connect the mobile antenna plug into the ANT connector on the rear panel. (For more information on antenna installation, please refer to the instruction guide that came with your antenna.)
The BC350C can be mounted using the mounting bracket (optional). This bracket is available from the Uniden parts department (see page 3)
1. Select an ideal location in your vehicle to mount the BC350C. Avoid a location that could interfere with your driving. In a passenger car, the ideal location is underneath the dashboard on the passenger side.
2. Use the mounting bracket (optional) as a template for marking the location of the mounting screws. Note: If there are screws already holding the dashboard, you can use the same screw holes to mount the bracket.
3. Drill the necessary holes and secure the mounting bracket in place using the screws provided.
4. Mount the radio to the bracket only after the wiring has been connected to the rear panel.
Connecting the Power Cord
Note: If you are not experienced in connecting accessories to the vehicle fuse box, please see your automotive dealer for advice on proper installation.
Installation for everyday use:
1. Check the vehicle battery connections to determine which battery terminal (positive or negative) is grounded to the engine block or chassis. Most of todays vehicles use a negative ground. If your vehicle has a negative ground, fol­low Steps 2 and 3. Otherwise, skip to the note following Step 3.
2. Connect the RED wire of the DC power cord to the acces­sory contact in your vehicles +13.8 VDC fuse box.
3. Connect the BLACK wire of the DC power cord to the neg­ative side of the vehicle (usually the chassis).
Note: In vehicles with a positive ground, the RED wire con­nects to the chassis and the BLACK wire connects to the accessory contact in the fuse box.
4. Insert the DC plug into the DC 13.8V jack on the back of the scanner.
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