General Research of Electronics Inc 0716 用户手册

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HINT:
Remember that there is context sensitive help available for each 
menu item in the object menus. Just press 
FUNC
, then 
SEL
 to view 
the help, and 
SEL
 again to exit the help screen.
These are just a few of the many ways you can incorporate 
different types of search objects in your Scan List configurations. 
and, just a few of the many ways that each of the individual 
search types can be configured to your preferences and needs. 
Be sure to refer to the Detailed Menu Reference section of the 
manual for detailed information for each of the search object 
types.
Grouping Objects with Scan Lists
By default, new objects are automatically assigned to Scan List 
01. Now that you have entered a variety of new objects that are, 
by default, members of Scan List 01, you may want to separate 
these objects into separate Scan Lists so that you can easily 
enable or disable groups of objects as needed depending on 
what you want to scan. There are 20 regular Scan Lists 
available, a special “FAV” Scan List for one-button access to your
favorite Scannable Objects, and a Skywarn Scan List.
Although Scan Lists may seem similar to the “banks” that are 
used in older bank/channel scanner designs, you will find that 
they are much more powerful and flexible than “banks”. The
number of objects that can be grouped in a Scan List is limited 
only by the scanners memory, and single objects can be 
members of multiple Scan Lists without creating duplicate 
versions of those objects and manually placing them in each 
Scan List where you want them included.
You can also mix and match different object types in Scan Lists 
as you see fit. Feel free to group your objects in the manner that 
best suits your listening style. If you choose to group your objects
by geographical area, and find that the best set of Scannable 
Objects for your area includes a mix of trunked talkgroups and 
conventional channels, go right ahead and put them all in the 
same Scan List. There are no limitations as to the type of objects
that can exist together in the same Scan List.
How you group objects in Scan Lists is entirely up to you! Here 
are some examples of how objects can be grouped:
Geographically
You may wish to group your Scannable Objects according to the 
areas where they are used. For example, assume that you 
0716 User Manual
Page 54