Forum Discussion
5 Replies
- BumpyroadExplorer
bob_nestor wrote:
FRS may have short range, but you can use it legally in Canada without a license. However that doesn't mean that most others on the hiway will have one on the same channel, same with CB and Ham radios. There's enough traffic on the hiway that just standing at the side of the road and waving for help will work. The further you get away form major population areas, the more people tend to be willing to stop and help strangers.
that is why a CB is more practical. you can use channel 19 and get most people. with FRS it is just a guessing game.
bumpy - bob_nestorExplorer IIIFRS may have short range, but you can use it legally in Canada without a license. However that doesn't mean that most others on the hiway will have one on the same channel, same with CB and Ham radios. There's enough traffic on the hiway that just standing at the side of the road and waving for help will work. The further you get away form major population areas, the more people tend to be willing to stop and help strangers.
- kevfraExplorer
JoeTampa wrote:
FRS is very short range. I'd stick with CB or get your ham radio license.
I have a ham license but I seriously doubt every other rig on the road has one. Won't do me any good to call out to Japan for service. I'm looking for the mode that is commonly found on the road there, and that definitely is not ham. - Mandalay_ParrExplorer
JoeTampa wrote:
FRS is very short range. I'd stick with CB or get your ham radio license.
X2 - JoeTampaExplorerFRS is very short range. I'd stick with CB or get your ham radio license.
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