I kinda wonder how well that Uniden 885 actually works. Maybe in the 80's-90's pretty good but today not so well. Our city, county, fire, and ems are all on a Motorola APCO 25 system that is encrypted. There is not a scanner or ap made that picks it up. Your right, a radio without SSB is just not worth it to me.
Don’t forget we’re not sitting home. I was in Ohio a few days ago. Then New Mexico. Today, Florida.
The addition of the scanner is to enable additional information about problems on the road. A few days ago on Memphis FIRE was reporting accident with fatalities.
I took the longer way around.
Some agencies are encrypted. Not all. Not by any means.
As to SSB, yes, it would be nice. But one has the CB for real time info. That won’t be on SSB. Besides, I can easily carry more then one radio.
The 885 I am viewing as I did in obtaining a GPS moving map four years ago. I found what was useful about it. And learned to watch for where it was a problem.
One of the RadioReference threads was long-term use by a driver. His take was that it was valuable enough that he’d replace it right away. As that is my sentiment about the GPS, I understood. And decided it would be a good addition.
I can alter the radio speaker output (information) to what I choose.
I haven’t yet come upon a serious Interstate accident in a rural area. That should be interesting.
Immediately after installation I was headed towards the Interstate. Heard of a bad wreck my direction. A driver offered an alternative easy for me to use (and I was empty). So, had a little drive in the countryside. And avoided what grew into a 5-mile backup. CB reports only: a VERY heavy truck traffic road nearing a major city. Scanner info dribbled in too late.
Not all problems can be avoided. Or should be (heavily loaded and onto sketchy side roads? Maybe not) as safety still stands predominant.
I usually leave both CB and Scanner functioning simultaneously. Have had some pretty good laughs after a serious “taxpayer radio” report immediately followed by some goofy truck driver ejaculation. Incongruous pairing.
Don’t have a computer with me to set up the card. I’ll try and find someone if I have a 34-reset (hours off) today.
The point of this scanner is — like CB — to help aid information in what’s happening around me RIGHT NOW.
In only a short while I’ll be far away.
Online truck driver discussions about the various brands/types of GPS maps are on the quality of traffic delay reporting. It’s about timeliness. Once one commits to a route in a big truck, that’s it.
What’s a few minutes in a car and an annoyance, is for the truck driver tied directly to his paycheck. His morale.
Emotions predominate as it’s a physically-tiring job. It’s nothing on a weekday for me to be up & about long before you. And I’ve still got the wheels turning after you’ve returned home from work. Had dinner. Thinking about bed. I had to make decisions about where to make today’s stops or destination yesterday.
A few minutes here, a few minutes there, and the whole thing can fold up and topple over.
A driver who is home every night or every weekend puts up with problems differently than someone out for weeks on end. For starters, he knows the territory.
Not so easy when the job has you many states away from familiarity. That’s when these tools take on their significance. Type, quality, accessories, installation.
.
.