Subject: Cell Mod for BC8500 XLT From: Steve Donnell Bill Inabnett wrote: > > Would sincerely appreciate info on cell mod and other mods for BC8500 XLT > scanner. > > Please Email : bill@unicomp.net Hi, the BC-8500 is fairly easy to modify for Cellular. We first wrote this up two years ago in National Scanning. Basically, what you want to do, is to swap the logic control lines that drive transistors Q4 and Q5 on the receiver PC board. This can be done with a DPDT switch. Transistor Q4 controls activation of the 800 MHz band signal input filter. Q5 activates the 350 - 500 MHz band signal filter. By doing this logic line swap around, when you set the '8500 to search between 371.19 and 396.80 MHz, you are actually receiving signals from the 869.04 to 894.97 MHz(Cellular). This occurs because the radio uses the same range of Local Oscillator freqs to receive the 870 Mhz(blocked freqs) area as is used for 370 MHz reception(freqs the radioo can be programmed for). In the case of the BC8500, you also need to do an additional control line swap, to that of the control lines that drive transistors Q41 and Q42. These set the operating mode of the radio. In the 370 MHz range, the default(and only) operating mode the radio can be set for is AM. For Cellular reception you need to have Narrow FM mode activated. This is done by swapping the logic line that drives Q42(AM mode) to alternately activate Q41(for NFM mode).Again, this can easily be done with a DPDT switch. This additional feature can also be used to permit AM/NFM mode switching for other types of reception as well. In most other scanners,like the BC9000, operating mode can be user controlled from the keypad. One further step is the be sure and set your tuning/search frequency step rate to 5 KHz for acurate on-channel tuning. Before starting this modification, I highly recomend obtaining a copy of the BC8500 service manual to serve as a guide. If you'd rather not attempt this work yourself, try contacting Cellular Security Group at 508-281-8892 . There are a couple of other things you can do with the BC8500 that we documented in the former RCMA Journal. These mods include: improved preamp ICs, better Tape Out audio, and adding heat sinks to the voltage regs.(one on the far right and another near the front of the main PCB) Have fun.