PRO34.3 Subject: Eliminating a birdie in the PRO-34 portable scanner by Bob Parnass, AJ9S Birdies are unwanted signals generated within a receiver, which cause the receiver to "hear itself." Some birdies are caused by the unwanted product of the local oscillator. Another cause is a stage, which oscillates but isn't meant to oscillate, such as a high gain intermediate frequency (IF) amplifier. Most birdies, especially those generated by a local oscillator, are frequency stable. It's difficult to rid a radio of these birdies, and solutions usually involve better internal shielding and isolation among the stages. A "wandering birdie" is one which changes frequency. Wandering birdies, and birdies which appear and disappear suddenly, may be caused by intermittent ground connections within the radio, or defective bypass capacitors. After using his Radio ShackO PRO-34 portable scanner for a few months, Ron Smithberg, a radio hobbyist in Joliet, was hampered by a "wandering birdie." Ron's scanner was hearing itself on a few frequencies in the VHF-Hi range, but the birdie disappeared when he tilted the radio or squeezed the case. There had been no problem when the scanner was purchased initially. CONTINUED IN FILE PRO34.9