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---
layout: default
title: "Setting Up A Police Scanner With An RTL-SDR"
---

so my city has a community-run police scanner broadcast on the internet, but
the person who runs it is a bootlicker who's been threatening to shut it down
if people are using it to make trouble for the cops. so i figured i'd set up my
own. this is how i did it, hope it's useful.

## shopping
you'll need [an RTL-SDR unit][rtl-sdr]. i recommend the dipole antenna kit as
well, so you don't need to make any additional purchases. if you're a radio
enthusiast already, you might have a better antenna available, but if you're
like me you do not and it's worth the US$10. mine took a bit over a week to
arrive. if you're extremely unlucky, you might need two of them, but i was fine
with just one.

[rtl-sdr]: https://www.rtl-sdr.com/buy-rtl-sdr-dvb-t-dongles/

## basic setup
once your RTL-SDR arrives, you'll want to put together your antenna. if you're
lucky, like i am, you can just extend the antennas arbitrarily and it'll work
fine; if you're cursed, the RTL-SDR website has resources on how long is ideal
for various frequencies.

connect the antenna to the RTL-SDR unit, plug it in, and follow the RTL-SDR
[quick start guide][qsg]. SDRSharp will work, or any of the other Windows
options. some of what we'll need is only available on windows.

once your RTL-SDR's drivers are sorted out, find the specifications for police
radio in your area on [RadioReference][]. click your state, click your county,
scroll down and see if there's a link above a frequency table for you. if
you're lucky, there is, and if you click it there's a page with a table with
System Type and System Voice entries at the top. mine has a system type of
EDACS Networked Standard and a system voice of ProVoice and Analog, so the rest
of this assumes that's what you've got as well. if not, good luck.

there should be a table for System Frequencies on your RadioReference page.
start up SDRSharp and tune your radio to the first frequency listed there.
you'll probably hear a bunch of static and the UI will look something like
this:

![one constant signal and a bunch of other signals coming in and out at other frequencies](/assets/2020-06-26-police-scanner-setup-1.png)

see how there's one constant signal and a bunch of other signals that appear
and disappear all over the place? well, that's trunking, and the constant
signal is our *control channel*. if you don't see it, you can click and drag on
the bottom axis of the top panel to change the view. once you've found that
constant signal, click on it to get the approximate frequency, go back to your
frequency table and the closest thing to that will be the exact frequency.
it should sound like a series of weird beeps instead of static. remember that
frequency, it'll be important later.

*update 2020-07-31*: that control channel can change between the frequencies
listed on RadioReference. if things randomly quit working, come back to this
step, and see if the control channel has moved. i'll mark down below the
places that need changing accordingly.

[qsg]: https://www.rtl-sdr.com/rtl-sdr-quick-start-guide/
[RadioReference]: https://www.radioreference.com/apps/db/

## specific setup

EDACS is a trunked system, so we're using [RTL-SDR's trunked radio tutorial][t]
as our guide, mostly. that guide assumes we have two RTL-SDRs, but there's a
piece at the end explaining how to do it with just one. that sucks. i'm going
to paraphrase it here.

first, we're going to download the software we need: [Unitrunker][],
[VB-Cable][], and [DSD+][] (extract both the regular and DLL downloads to the
same folder). install unitrunker and VB-Cable and extract dsd+ somewhere
convenient. you might need to reboot after installing VB-Cable because
computers are bad. VB-Cable might set your default input and output devices to
the wrong things when you install it, so switch them back if it does.

open up dsd+. it'll open four different windows, one of them should have a list
of audio input and output devices. check the number in the input list that goes
with CABLE Output - for me it's 3. pull up notepad and make a new file. since
my input was number 3, i'm typing

```bat
DSDPlus.exe -i3M
```

in that file: if yours is not 3, put whatever the correct number is for you
instead of 3. then, save the file, find your DSDPlus folder, make sure the type
is set to "All Files", and name the file `run.bat`. close dsd+, go to that
folder, and open that `run.bat` file you just created. it should pull up dsd+
and if you're lucky it'll print

```text
audio input device #3 (CABLE Output (VB-Audio Virtual ) initialized
```

or something like that. leave that open.

open up unitrunker. click the `+` to add a new receiver, and click the RTL2832
button to add your RTL-SDR. set your settings around like this:

![the RTL-SDR settings](/assets/2020-06-26-police-scanner-setup-2.png)

the most important things are the RTL Device, the sample rate (2.56 msps), and
the VCOs (2 VCOs). i do not know what a VCO is and i do not care enough to find
out. we should now have two VCO tabs next to our info tab. the first one needs
to look kinda like this:

![the RTL-SDR VCO 1 settings](/assets/2020-06-26-police-scanner-setup-3.png)

the important things are the Role being Signal, the Park frequency being the
control channel we found earlier (mine is 851.7625), and the Mute box being
checked.

*update 2020-07-31*: if the control channel changes, this Park frequency is one
of the two things you'll need to update.

the second VCO should look kinda like this:

![the RTL-SDR VCO 2 settings](/assets/2020-06-26-police-scanner-setup-4.png)

the important things are the Role being Voice, the Deemphasis box being
unchecked, and the Digital Output being set to your CABLE Input. this means it
will connect up with dsd+ listening to our CABLE Output.

press Play now; it should pull up a window with a Channels tab. the Channels
tab should look something like this:

![the unitrunker channels tab](/assets/2020-06-26-police-scanner-setup-5.png)

but the Frequency column will all be zeroes except for the control frequency we
found earlier. you'll need to copy over the rest of the frequencies manually
from the RadioReference site.

*update 2020-07-31*: if the control channel changes, you'll need to uncheck the
Control box on the old control channel, and check the Control box on the new
control channel.

press the stop button and the play button again,
and everything should in theory be working. ideally, the Call History tab will
be crowded and updating pretty frequently, and unitrunker will be passing
things along to dsd+ which will give us the audio we want. technically, this is
enough.

[t]: https://www.rtl-sdr.com/rtl-sdr-tutorial-following-trunked-radio-unitrunker/
[Unitrunker]: http://www.unitrunker.com/
[VB-Cable]: http://www.vb-cable.com/
[DSD+]: https://www.dsdplus.com/

## groups

the thing, though, is we don't have context for any of this. for now, at least.
RadioReference should have a table or several of talkgroups - the "list all in
one table" button may come in handy - and we can use that information to figure
out who we're hearing, and have at least some control over who takes priority
if multiple people in different contexts are talking at once.

find the main unitrunker window - it's titled "Universal Trunker" and if you
don't have it open just click the home button a bunch until it opens - and then
open the Systems tab and double-click the one that exists. open the Groups tab
in that window, and it should give you a massive list with columns for ID,
Label, and a bunch of stuff we don't care about right now. the ID matches up
with the DEC column in the RadioReference table, and the Label can be either
"Description" or "Alpha Tag" or something you make up yourself if you feel
creative. if you pay RadioReference $15 for a Premium subscription then
unitrunker can import that data automatically.

once you've filled that all in, open the Sites tab and double-click the entry
you see there, then open the Call History tab. the group labels you added
should now be appearing in the Audience column; the LCN and Frequency should
turn green for what unitrunker is currently listening to.

back in the Groups tab, you can edit the Priority values to control which
groups will be chosen more often - as far as i can tell, higher priority groups
will interrupt lower priority groups, and equal priority groups will just play
whoever started talking first.

## broadcasting

this setup lets you listen to things locally, but what if you want your
comrades with no hardware to be able to also listen? the laziest option is to
just stream the Call History window on Twitch or something, but in theory there
are better options. RadioReference runs Broadcastify, which is designed for
hosting police scanner livestreams, but they have to manually approve your
broadcast, which is annoying for short term activity. you could run an icecast
server yourself or something, but that takes effort to configure. honestly all
of those kinda suck but those are your options as far as i know.

*update 2020-07-31*: you can also let your friendly neighborhood succulent run
an icecast server for you; reach out to me if you need something like this. if
you've got an icecast server, you'll need to pay for (or otherwise obtain)
[VB-CABLE A+B][], set up VB-CABLE A, and grab [butt (broadcast using this tool)][butt].

you'll need to set DSD+ to output to "CABLE-A Input" like how you set it to
input from "CABLE Output" - Cable A is the fourth output in DSD+, so my run.bat
now looks like this:

```bat
DSDPlus.exe -i3M -o4
```

run butt, pull up the settings, and under the Audio tab set the Input Device
to "CABLE-A Output". (for bonus points, set the Streaming Codec to AAC+.) under
the Main tab, Add a new Server and put in whatever info your icecast server
admin told you to use. now restart your DSD+ and hit butt's play button to
start streaming, and you should be running a livestream of your police scanner
that is accessible over the internet.

[VB-CABLE A+B]: https://www.vb-audio.com/Cable/index.htm#DownloadCable
[butt]: https://danielnoethen.de/butt/