border man wrote:...where can I find some good info on operating a scanner. ...
I haven't looked for much information about them for quite some time, but can pass on what little information that I have.
Get a portable. The bases are OK, but when the power goes out the handheld will let you listen in on what happened, and you can take it with you.
I have a couple handheld scanners. A used one is not a bad investment since 10 channels are about all you want to scan without missing much, and the pawn shops usually have a few old ones to choose from. They are handy for just having in the house.
That is why I still have the first one that I ever bought. It is a 10 channel Uniden Bearcat BC60XL.
Now some of the other models offer much more, and one very handy feature that you will want is the search function. You can scan a bank of frequencies. Either frequencies that you have stored , or a range. This works great for races, and while out of town listening. It will seek and store active frequencies.
I again bought Uniden, this time the Bearcat Twin turbo Sportcat SC150B. This one is pre-ban so I have 29-956mhz coverage.
If you get your Ham license there are quite a few radios that have wide band coverage, or can be modified to RX wide band.
I think my Yaesu mobile works almost as well as my best scanner, although the scanner probably does a better job for just listening.
If you are looking for FCC listed frequencies try FCC frequency database or alternate site