Alinco DJ-X11 – Portable Wideband Receiver

The Alinco DJ-X11T Portable Wideband Receiver. Wideband in this case means from 0.05 to 1300 MHz.

Has dual-frequency receive, FM/WFM/AM/SSB/CW receiving modes, voice guidance and a bug detector which detect nearby signals.

Comes with a Li-ion battery, adapter and charger base, AA battery case, SMA antenna, belt clip and hand-strap.

More pictures here.

Manual in 6 parts here. Parts 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

FCC ID: PH3DJ-X11T

Icom IC-R6

The Icom IC-R6 receiver has a range of 100Khz – 1.3Ghz. (With some gaps.)
No batterypack on this one, just good old-fashioned batteries. At least they are NiMH rechargeable batteries.

More pictures here, and the manual here.

FCC ID:AFJ325000

RadioShack PRO-107 iScan Scanner

The new RadioShack PRO-107 iScan Scanner made by GRE.

So what is iScan? The iScan scanner is computer programmable scanner which contains the complete RadioReference database on an SD card.


Some other cool feature:

  • Multi-Trunking (EDACS, Motorola, LTR)
  • SAME Weather Alert
  • Signal Stalker II
  • Signal Strength Meter
  • 25-50mhz, 108-512mhz, 764-1300mhz (minus cellphone gaps)
  • All this in a small package (127 x 60 x 27 mm and 190g) plus the firmware and library are upgradeable.

    More information about this and other scanners can be found on http://www.radioreference.com/

    Manual can be found here.

    FCC ID: ‘ADV0602′

    Uniden BC335C Mobile/Base Scanner

    The Uniden BC335C is your basic scanner, does VHF, UHF, AIR and 800.


    More pictures here, manual here.

    FCC ID: ‘AMWUB362′

    RadioShack PRO-405 by GRE

    Another RadioShack desktop scanner, the PRO-405.

    Runs from 29-512 Mhz, with gaps, NO MIL-AIR and NO Trunking. But it does have NOAA weather alert, and FM broadcast receive, which makes this a good severe weather radio. Except it doesn’t seem to run on batteries.


    Manual here.

    FCC ID: ‘ADV0828′

    Uniden BCT15X

    Uniden’s new base/mobile scanner with TRUNKTRACKER III technology. That means it does EDACS, Motorola systems (not P25) and LTR. Note this is the X model, which is slightly different then the BCT15, like more memory.

    Loaded with features, it has an option for GPS, and computer programming. Range is about 25-1300 Mhz with the usual gaps.


    More information can be found on RadioReference.com or Uniden.com, manual here.

    FCC ID: ‘AMWUB361′