I read somewhere that wide band transceivers are not as accurate as narrow band (approx 450-500 Mhz) transceivers.
Is this true?
Whilst the ICOM IC-208H (118-173, 230-549 and 810-999 MHz) looks like a bloody good unit, since it's a wideband is it as accurate as a 2 dedicated UHF and VHF units?
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Icom IC-F6063H in Aus
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Scanners/ transceivers that receive a wide selection of the spectrum (say 118mhz-999mhz) usually do not sound anywhere near as clear or loud as a receiver/transceiver that only picks up 450mhz-490mhz. It'll still hear it but you might have to turn the volume up or put up with more background white noise, even if you have a strong signal.TheOtherLeft wrote:I read somewhere that wide band transceivers are not as accurate as narrow band (approx 450-500 Mhz) transceivers.
Is this true?
Whilst the ICOM IC-208H (118-173, 230-549 and 810-999 MHz) looks like a bloody good unit, since it's a wideband is it as accurate as a 2 dedicated UHF and VHF units?
For example i have a handheld Icom scanner/receiver which receives from 0.150 mhz up to something like 1300mhz but when i'm listening to UHF (470mhz) i prefer to listen to my icom 41s or base units because they only receive that band are super clear in comparison to the wide band receiver.
cheers
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