Although I've had loads of airband scanners over the years, you can never have too many :-)
I've just upgraded to an Icom IC-PCR1500 computer controlled scanner. In a departure form all my other scanners, I didn't pick this one because it has lots of buttons, knobs and dials - in fact, the only control it has on it is the on/off switch! It's connected to my PC via a standard USB cable and it runs just fine alongside RadarBox.
In the screeenshot below, I've reduced the size of the RB window so I can see the PCR1500 interface - or at least the bit I'm interested in - below the RB display. I've got it scanning all the en-route frequencies so I can listen to traffic in range. When I hear something interesting, or match a transmission up to what I can see on the screen, then I pause the scan and follow that aircraft. Here, I've heard EIN27F turning at WAL inbound to EGBB. To make it easier to follow this aircraft, I've used the quick fliters to show only the EIN aircraft. As the aircraft changes frequency, I note it down and put it into the PCR1500 manually. If I miss the frequency, then I just start scanning again until I hear the aircraft on the new frequency, then I pause the scan again. Great fun :-)
Click the link below for a full size screenshot:
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2189/2481101000_0ecdf2826f_o.jpgI've also just realised that my Nvidia GeForce 8500GT graphics card has 2 outputs, a standard analogue VGA and a DVI-D digital output. As my current LCD monitor has a DVI-D input, I've connected this up and dug out my old VGA LCD as a second monitor. So, I can have the RB and PCR1500 display as above, and have FireFox on the secondary monitor - fantastic!
What would be even nicer is if you could "undock" the RB map window and have this on one monitor and the aircraft list and the PCR1500 on the other - maybe a later version.
Allocator