I too, have been considering purchasing a scanner. My knowledge is next to nothing about them. I have been to the radio shack and uniden websites. I assume that an analog scanner is sufficient. Are 200 channels ok? Are there some scanners that will not work on trains? How hard would it be for a middle-aged woman to use a scanner? Do they need to be programmed first?
Thanks
I just bought a new handheld Uniden BC72XLT for just over $75 with free shipping (they're widely available for around this price or up to ~ $100 but no need to pay that much).
I absolutely love it. This scanner will easily monitor all railroad frequencies in the US and Canada. It is also preprogrammed to scan Weather, Police, Fire, Marine, Air, and HAM bands. Plus you can program up to 100 channels manually.
One of the best features for listening to rail is that you can have it scan a ranges of frequencies where you define the range. For example, you can define a range as covering 159.810 - 161.565 MHz and have it scan that range. This will cover every railroad in the US and Canada, including Amtrak. Therefore, you don't need to know specific rail frequencies to scan, just the range given above. As long as you scan that range, you will always be able to pick up rail conversations and detectors wherever you travel.