โMay-08-2016 09:45 AM
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โMay-09-2016 09:22 AM
โMay-09-2016 09:00 AM
โMay-09-2016 08:52 AM
CA Traveler wrote:mowermech wrote:Since Jan it's been known that using a percent symbol will cause that. There are several workarounds.
I wonder why the connection resets and won't allow me to post here?
โMay-09-2016 07:54 AM
โMay-09-2016 06:48 AM
mowermech wrote:Since Jan it's been known that using a % symbol will cause that. There are several workarounds.
I wonder why the connection resets and won't allow me to post here?
โMay-09-2016 06:26 AM
โMay-09-2016 06:16 AM
โMay-09-2016 06:12 AM
โMay-09-2016 05:26 AM
โMay-09-2016 03:40 AM
FIRE UP wrote:
Ladies and Gents,
...Anyway, just wondering, just how many might already be using HAM radios for coach to coach, Jeep to Jeep type communications and how do you like it vs the old "C/B" stuff?
Scott
โMay-09-2016 01:05 AM
SCVJeff wrote:To honestly answer your question I couldn't get ahold of any of the line drivers! I caught up to a few of them at a coffee stop and they told me why I couldn't get ahold of them. Bye Bye to that useless Cobra 40 Channel CB and hello Galaxy 44DX. Most of the filth were coming from base sets ran out of people houses in the Seattle/Tacoma area not the truckers that I ran with.J-Rooster wrote:Did you call em' and say you can't talk over those filthy truckers even with your 1/4 gal linear? ๐CA Traveler wrote:Great Question! I trucked on the West Coast for 44-1/4 years. Most of us truckers had 10 liter radios and we talked on the funny channels (These were channels that we had installed in our radios that were above Channel 40. Old CB's had 23 channels until the late 70's when CB's were allowed to have 40 channels. Funny Channels are Channel 41 and above the channels we talked on on I-5 were in the 70's) I ran a Galaxy DX-44 and it was pumped up plus I ran a 250 Watt Amp. What I really liked about the DX-44 was it was able to pull in the signal to the other trucker that I was talking to as we were driving in the opposite direction. I had a CB Radio Shop install my funny channels and it was very nice quiet polite channels. Truckers get sick in tired of listening to filth on the regular 40 channels where most of the filth comes from and the worst was coming out of Tacoma, WA. base sets. We complained to the FCC to no avail.
Where have all of the truckers gone? Cell phones, HAM or?
I used to build those way back then but the smallest we sold was 300w dead carrier.
Btw: Liter = Meter
โMay-09-2016 12:54 AM
โMay-09-2016 12:51 AM
Ed_Gee wrote:The question is how many are still active? The bands are empty these days... All of them.2lazy4U wrote:
I've heard that a lot of HAMs are getting older and it's not as popular as it once was with the advent of the cell phone.
There are more licensed amateur radio operators in America today than there have ever been.