>>150580843
>like scan and hold.
My Beofeng will scan and hold for a few seconds and you can hit a button to cancel the scanning if you like what you hear. I was wondering if your rig could monitor multiple frequencies and jump to whatever is active. Tone codes would probably be helpful for that. My radio can scan for them, but it's too much hassle to do it at the track.
>If you have a favorite driver
My problem is that at IndyCar and NASCAR I'm listening to the race on the HAM frequencies. At IMSA races, I have an additional FM radio plugged into an auxiliary jack. I went a bit nuts and bought two so I can also talk to my freind and we can find each other super easily. People also think we are working the race and I even got accused of spotting for Corvette at the Ford hospitality suite, kek.
> If you're a race fan, you really do need a scanner. If you think you don't, it's because you don't know.
Truth bomb. You don't even need a nice one. Those radios are like $30 and the cheaper headset was $90. There is one on Amazon for as low as $40. It's 300% worth it to just get an FM radio, ear buds and ear muffs if the track has an FM transmitter. Road Atlanta, VIR and Road America all do.