This brings back great memories of the 80's when I would stay at the house with the base station and my brother would get on his bike and ride as far as he can before going out of range. So much fun and magical.We were just kids exploring the mysteries of the world. Now we have our own homes and lives in neighboring towns but decided to get back into CB by putting up base station antennas at our homes and buying the new FM capable SSB/AM CBs on the market. We still have our Ham licenses so we may get the one that also has 10 meters. The magic never goes away. Who knows, maybe the kids will get into it.
So many memories, was absolutely brilliant times, 1983 first cb was an Amstrad 901 with a di-pole on a 15ft scaffy in the back garden and 50watt burner, passed car test in 87 and that was it, escort mk2 1600 sport midland 2001 and 100watt burner (so many flat batteries) and a mag mount. Met my first wife on the CB. All my mates had them in cars we had a scream, so many fun times, wish i could turn the clock back.
Title heads up from an old breaker,19 is not the calling channel! 14 is! And that's what killed it. All the kids with a cb chattering about school and boyfriends/girlfriends! The guys who needed the channel ,truckers mainly,had to put up with inane rubbish every day,it got so bad a lot of us used ch9 out of desperation which went against everything us old hands did. I started with a midland straight 40 and a dx27 twig. I gave up when the government decided we could have 27fm legally with a licence,and then it died,we had a good relationship with the local police when we were on the illegal am radios,helping them on searches for kids that hadn't come home etc or a person who's head was in a bad place. We would go out in a team of about 10-15 cars and work with the police to find them,most of the time successfully. Once the kids and idiots started we just gave up,some stayed with sidebanding for international copies but other than that nothing,I've still got my old midland from about 15 years ago as I thought it may have improved but it's not a patch on the old days. Sad really,my son does ham radio and hes trying to get me on it as well which I may try. Oh and i met my wife on there too,ladybird,been together 41 years until she passed away feb. Anyway,3's and 8's to all old breakers,10 10 til we do it again,shadow down and gone!
@@derrickmanning2597 I do recommend giving Ham Radio a try. I'm not bashing CB or GMRS, both fine and those might also suit you depending on what you are looking for. Ham Radio takes a bit more effort to get the license, but there are so many bands, modes, and aspects to ham radio. And, there are so many really different groups. If you don't like one, try another.
@craigsaunders3532 yeh bro u bring back memories, had one in my Ford capri 2.0s fishnet recaro seats , big ass bendy antenna and shouting on the side side “ breaker 19 for a copy what’s your handle lol ❤❤❤❤
I met my ex wife on CB....at the wedding when her father gave his speech he told everybody ( in case they didn't already know ) that his daughter and I had met on the CB...then he continued on by saying that he'd been jumping feet first on it since !
Good to hear! I live in California and I've always had a CB under the dash in my truck. I've often considered taking the radio out because I never used it. Until a few years ago while driving across the desert to visit friends in Arizona I came across a roll over accident. Other motorists had stopped but none of us had cell service in this area because it was so remote. However, I was able to contact CA Highway Patrol on my radio and get help. Even if I never encounter this situation again I will always keep a radio on hand as an emergency backup.
Remember getting a cb in 1984.. 14 was the calling channel and 19 then was used by truckers, then gat taken over by everyone. Great memories. Thanks Andy
My Dad had a CB in his car for most of the 80s. Unfortunately he passed away last year and I'd have loved to share this video with him but still brought back great memories.
This brings back so many memories from the 80s, brilliant times when people helped each other out. Saving a young lad's life back in the early 80s after he rolled his car, with the nearest phone box being miles away, having lots of fun doing WALLEY hunts, chatting to others miles away when the skip was bad, and not being able to call someone just up the road. Happy memories and fun times, when people helped each other out.
Hey Andy. I still have my Ham international multimode 2 from the 1970s and it still works! I got back into radio about 4 years ago and there's no one about round here. I then went and got my amateur licence and there's no one on 2 metres either. . . Luckily I love DX and remember my first contact into Italy on 27mhz when I was at college and I was hooked. Great hobby and I think that CB was the first platform of social media and the internet sadly took over. The radio looks great. Keep the videos coming. 73's
I'm sure it used to be 14 for breaking and the truckers used 19. Then everyone went away, the farms bought PMR, hauliers got vodafone, small businesses got SBR. CB was good it worked everywhere, still can't get a decent mobile signal.
From middle of 1987 to the middle of 1990 I used the CB radio regulary. Met 3 ex girlfriends from just being on the airs in Surrey. Met friends and had great laugh out loud moments on the CB airwaves. I couldn't replicate those days or would I because the memories I will cherish for always. Great video and thank you for sharing.
When I was into CBs (early 80s) - channel 14 was the general "pickup" channel - channel 19 was for truckers and mobile people. Channel 9 was for emergencies. You'd go on channel 14 and say "one for for a copy" 🙂When you got someone you'd say "pick a window" (i.e. pick a channel) and of you'd go for chat! Happy fun days. The channels were packed. Sometimes you'd just sit and listen to people arguing!
Those were the days! You could walk into Comet or Tandy and come out a ‘breaker’ lol 😂 I had a handheld Binatone which took about 40 AA batteries lol. It looked more like an army field radio, with its massive telescopic chrome antenna and chunky frame.
I remember setting up my rig on my bike, with a car battery on the pannier rack, a dx27 mounted on the rear light mount, and the rig on the front light mount. The mike was draped over the handlebars. I used to get a lot of weird looks as I cycled round my home town chatting to people. Good times 😁
Great video as always.. amazing how many people comment here about how nice cb radio used to be. Well it still is and we make sure to keep cb radio alive. 73's from Toronto.!!
Hi , 73s , Unit 21 here , my home channel is CH 23 , and CH 9 , I am in Brooklyn NY , and I talk everyday to Puerto Rico on CH 9 from Brooklyn , with a window antenna " Hustler" ,during hurricane Maria I was in PR with no electricity for 3 months , so I had to use a car battery and a Astron 99 base ant very low in height , with a very small radio , and I made it to the USA with that setup , so I would say that CB for me worked very good in a time of need when the cell service was down , 5 stations in the USA picked me up and took my info , and called my aunt in NYC to let her know I was ok , so CB for me will never die , I wish all cars came with CB radios , that would be so much fun , I have had so much fun since my childhood with this , so sad todays kids are missing out on this , every time my grandkids come over I give them the mic and they have a blast talking on it . 73s from Unit 21 (WP4WF on HAM BANDS and WREJ-401 on GMRS ) the sky is the limit take advantage of free internet communications out there . Alfred unit 21 on ch 23 /9 73s
Was from watching yours & Lewis's videos on the T-X that i decided tk recently purchase 1, even if its only to use once a blue moon, compare it with the Midland Portapak 27-805, old v new. Great video, 👋 Mrs K, pleasure to meet you 🙂
First time on cb was about 1979. My mates dad had one hidden under the seat of his van, remember it was illegal back then.in 81 had a harrier Cbx for Christmas and met my future wife. Later acquired a ssb set and worked the world. In 91 gained ham licence which I now use ,but still hold fond memories of the cb and still occasionally have a go. I do think it will become more popular again but never in the numbers we saw back then. It is a shame the truckers seem to have abandoned it as it was a useful tool for traffic reports etc.
In my day back in the 60s it was 14 for a copy. I had a CB in my car with an external aerial and another home base and the same setup. We would talk for hours on these both set ups.
i remember it was "one four for a copy" and voice came back "it's cheating to copy" or something Then at early hours in morning 14 went dead and in towns that had a motorway near them switched to 19 to talk to a bored trucker going past
It's a shame 14 fell out of favour around 1982-ish as being the calling channel. Having a separate "mobile users" channel 19 was a neat idea if only it had stuck.
@@simonblandford1002 how it was used before legalised that set the convention for 14. During daytime hours only truckers used 19 and they didn't want talk to fixed homebase rigs because of the skip made every conversation too short. So why separate 14 non-trucker calling channel, that convention carried through to legal CB along with other calling channels 8 for women's, 9 for gay, etc etc
When it changed from AM to FM that dramatically changed the culture and mode of operation, and the peculiar thing is many the conventions from AM needed out of utility, got carried through to legal CB and practiced like a religion!
I had a radio hooked up in my bedroom with a car battery charger hooked up to a car battery, then 2 screws screwed into the connectors, and the cb radio connected to the screws 😅 had plenty of laughs on there, all starting with a simple "1 9, 1 9 for a roger?" 😂👌
Like most of the other contributors here, I had a couple of CB's in the early 80's. At that time they were all AM (amplitude modulation). It's a vague memory now, but I think my last was a Midland 240M (my little Cobra got stolen out of the car). Fitted into a Fiat 131 Mirafiori using a 'snatch plate' with a Valour Half Breed antenna (whip). The 10-codes were a bugger to learn though!
Great memories. 1982, I was 13 at the time and had a Midland 401 with a Wotpole aerial on the side of the house. It was pretty good too considering it was totally legal. Silver Rod was the one to get though. Those eyeball cards were good as well, some great designs as I remember.
I had my 1st CB in my bedroom in 1981 when it became legal. FM. It was a great part of my life. I still have the books in the loft of who I talked to what poundage they were hitting me on "yea your blowing my windows out c'mon" 😂what their 20 was & all that. As things progresses I joined a CB club. Where met up every week. Thinking about it now its pretty insane. You couldn't let your kids do that these days. As soon as I started driving trucks in 91 I had a CB. I then passed HGV 1 in 92 & went abroad for 4-6 weeks at a time. Every truck had a CB. Years later. 2008 to be exact I put a CB I found in the loft in my F350 Super Duty. I thought it is broken from sitting in the loft for years. Went and bought a new one & the same. Dead as a door nail. As in nobody on it at all. One night on my way to Scotland I just left it turned on with squelch up a bit. All of a sudden ooop north I almost jumped out of my seat as I heard a guy on there. I had a brief chat as I passed his town. He was almost as excited as I was. I still have a couple, but don't use them. Good video. I like the way your Mrs was humouring your excitement and getting involved. That was nice to see. 10 10 good buddy.
Good memories had a cb in the 80s in Holland and had contacts in Italy and Spain, got caught a couple of times but got a new one every time. But great fun with same minded enthusiasts.
I wish there was more activity in my area, all I hear is the obnoxious skip coming out of the southeast. I'm a ham too, and there's plenty of activity there, but there's something charming about CB.
I did not know it ever left. Thanks for the video. I have 2 Hand held CB's. Like them. Mine are 75-822. But I am sure many others are just as good. Yours looks like a very good cb radio. I also have a couple that were once in my truck. I think they are 23 channel.
My dad was an avid CBer back in the 80's, I have very fond memories from back then when he started on the illeagal AM systems then it was legalized. I had my own handle and my dad even set up a CB club at a local pub that was based fairly high up semi rural so was great for distance. Had such great times as a child and great friendships. It was a great way to make friends as well. I may even think of getting back into it after seeing this My dad had the fire stick aerial on his car and then the K40. Happy days missed so dearly
Yup, CB radio was extremely fun when I used to live in Orlando, Florida. I will never forget the Central Florida Sideband Net which met on channel 37 LSB every Saturday night back in the late 1980's, I'm glad to see CB radio hanging in there despite the advent of the internet and affordable cell phones. GMRS radio is now becoming very popular here in the US.
All the internet did was help out CB and also the affordable cell phones you still have to deal with the middleman paying that bill and social media in reality is not really that sociable actually gmrs radio has really taken off and so has CB I'm a ham radio operator ham radio CB and gmrs and I can tell you that for the past few days I've been on CB talking worldwide and have not used by ham radio equipment in the past few days everything has been done on CB even the application Tik Tok is being used to promote CB
That a great HT. I got one in the US. use it all the time. I took a very long telescopic antenna measured 11 meters 1/4 wave tuned it and put on HT . hard to hold but got out great. I did clip a counterpoise wire and drop it to ground. better tune. 73's USA ,NY
So many fond memories, I used to be big in cb until about 2002 when I got my ham license, I could still do it yet but there’s some people on there I don’t care to talk to, mud dusk is one of them. I’m in the us so I don’t know if I can get the thunder pole to but it’d be nice if I could though.
I used to love my CB. Used to have a silver rod strapped to the chimney. Everyone’s TV used to go off whenever you keyed your mic. 😂 I’ve got a Randy 3 coming today.
I remember breaking down in an old Allegro. It was a cold winters night and the snow was about 6 inches deep. I called for help on channel nine and someone contacted my family by land line. It took about two hours for them to get to me. It’s something I’ll never forget. My handle was the collector back in the eighties.
In 1981 it used to be Channel 9 for emergency, 14 was the norm for general calling and 19 was the mobiles general calling. Still got my Uniden rig and handheld unit with a 2 foot plus telescopic aerial takes 10 AA batteries and is chunk as hell. Good days though.
I got a Midland 2001 rig from a car boot aged about 13, Dad was a shortwave listener so helped me rig up a half wave. Made loads of friends on the rig, Channel 19 was always busy and channel 39 was Monday night Swap Shop where people would buy and sell stuff. Lots of eyeballs, loads of fun. I often wonder what it's like these days.
I loved the CB radio back when I was 13 yrs old in 1992, use to speak to my mates after school, an early social network but using radio instead of computers. Great video thanks for posting.👍
I wired in a CB radio to my TS50 bike in 1998! I used to keep in contact with my mum via CB radios. Mobile phones were not a thing so as we lived on top a massive hill in Brighton we just used CB radios to keep in contact all through my childhood! I had Midlands hand held radio from around 1993/4. The CB radio was in the kitchen. I never knew how magical them times were. My mates thought it was weird but we were a massive CB family! pretty much our whole family was on channel 38. it was much cheaper than the home phone to talk. people forget that you used to have to pay per minutes on home phones!
Love the video all power to resurrecting use of CB in the UK.. I started back in 81 when cb first started under the call sign Paperclip. I then moved on to amatuer 2m. My interest has been re-awoken.... Hope to hear some day down here in Cornwall!!.
Brings back many memories. I use to have my antenna on a biscuit tin and worked quite well, as well as taking the rig out it on the road. Brill for going to different towns and getting directions.
i bought 6 President Randys . All of the antennas fell apart . I purchased aftermarket HYS antennas plus BNC to TNT adapters so we could continue to use the radios. Where can I buy these radios ? I want the European version because they still use USA frequencies. Im here in New York City
Hello, Andy. Even with a 40db pre-amp, not one English voice on CB down here on the south coast on the old UK frequencies. Mids, packed out with the whole of the northern hemisphere, and even a bit of the south. Did try on FM to get a radio check, but nothing. Back to listening to short-wave. Good to see you've got a few friends to chat to up there.
I had CB Radio years ago 90s I think. I never had great setup just handheld and car antenna plus I never had swr done. Mainly I just use to listen in. But I getting one again it's the same one you got Thunderpole T-X I like to get better antenna in time but I can't have anything too large that's only only problem. But like you say no way round it as bigger is better with cb antennas. I living with me mum maybe I can persuade her for me to install a di pole.
I n Bristol we had a shop called KERNOW TRADING and you could buy anything it was am but was it not outlawed and the fm sets came in. Both my sets were installed in my escort van when I was working for ROSS & BONNYMAN and I fitting tailifts to trucks etc, oh that was the days sitting on the Durham Downs in Bristol talking to everybody, passing messages, directions, but then the radio vans started to start tracking us down. One night I was coming over the old Severn bridge and I got wind of a blockade on the English side so I unplugged my am set and put down the side of my van, if you know old escort vans there was a gap outside of the rear floor to the side, so the van lining you pull away from the side and slip the am set inside of the gap below the floor. Yes I got stopped yes they did search my van but never found the set that felt so good and I could still chat and make friends.
First cb radio was vice president Roy 40 ch AM. Then got a pulser 800, then ham international jumbo. Thanks for posting, great little handheld. 73s from 68WR048 in Co Antrim N. Ireland good bud.
Good old days, My first C.B. was a Midland 2000 on A.M. back in 1978, worked my way up to a sideband radio, had a 7 foot red firestick in the middle of the boot on an old Jag I had, brings back great memories
My patents also had CB radios. One at home (countryside) as a base station with big antenna. Other were on cars as a mobile. With neighbours working at forest were able to communicate and exchange information. On that time we had only 22 channel radios and amplitude and frequency modulations (AM/FM). During sunspot activity we got connections all over the globe, it was exciting! But when I moved to study into high school, parents also left farming. But I got personally interested about radios and communication. So I got HAM license (but no radio hw) and went to tech university to study telcomm. And then we got internet... until recently I got interested about radios again.
Good Good memories of cb's back in the day..my handle was Butcher boyhad a midland set up in my bedroom..brilliant..quite handy these days with the threat of Nuclear war
Hi Andy. Cb is very much still very popular. In my area Bolton we use AM channel 6 midband. We talk to the yanks all the time. My set up is a cobra 148 gtl dx amplifier is a cp-163-11 4 element yagi. . Never got bored of cb even after getting my full licence on ham radio. Currently building a 1k Watts amp at 60v from a server psu. Keep up the good work Andy love your vids. 26tm176 John 73,s
Ringway is the old name for manchester airport, I'm sat in my lounge not more than 5 miles from there and I can hear you loud and proud so the chances are so can he. Catch you on the flip flop good buddy, 10-4
My first CB was from Tandy, a Realistic something or other, 40 channels FM only and barely enough power to make it to the end of the street with a good wind behind it. Got a midland one for my first car which was much better and lasted well into the late 1990's. Now have the Randy 3, what a difference 20 years make with the quality of the rigs these days.
@@PhilMozchops1974 yep me too, a portable midland with telescopic antenna from Tandy in meadowhall the first year it opened. Them were the days 😢 I’ve said for the last 10 years or so we should all have a cb radio, way things are going I don’t think it’d take much to collapse the mobile phone network in the U.K. when you look what an over exaggerated bat flu can do!
Fantastic windup back in the 80s my handle was lighting my mate like roadrunner chopper and snowballs great times 1/4 do you copy what twigg up pushing to much swelch nose 😂😂
Still got my first CB from 1981 - a Colt 210 AM, and my first FM set from the same year - a Binatone 5 Star. Both still work great although I very rarely use them now as there's nobody on around here.
(on the side) lol snap i still have my rotel 240 with modded in mid band as they called it back then,my mate had the 5 star too lol. in the late 70s i bought a stalker (forgot what model) imported via back of a lorry from usa. had usb and lsb, used to be great listning to that. it only had 23 channels and old wooden teak effect,
Hi Andy I have got some good memories of cb, I met my wife through the cb bad memories I got busted on Reigate hill I took a scaffold pole and a gpa strapped to a 5 bar gate I had a Maxcom 4e and a 45w burner was doing great then the police arrived apparently I was knocking out the police in north London oops I had no idea and would have not done it intentionally they confiscated the burner and I got fined £250 which was quite a lot then it didn't put me off cb great times made a lot of friends, keep up the good work Andy.
Thanks for the video. Looking at maybe getting the Thunderpole. I'll not tell you how old I am but I had so much fun in the 70's using second-hand sets from the USA. Totally illegal and that's what made it fun !! Got a legal set as soon as they came out but the fun had gone !! Richard or 'The Bantam Racer' from Stevenage, Herts.
I had an old midland 40 channel cb radio with an echo mic. When I first set it up I was using an old metal coat hanger as an aerial until my new one turned up. It worked well.
I used to have a Rotel RVC 240 iirc, (FM) and a Cobra 148GTLDX (Sideband & AM), plus a burner and half wave di-pole etc. Happier times on the whole, good friends made too. Back in the day it was "14 for a copy" then select a channel to go to, iirc, if a trucker it was "19 for a copy" then move to a channel. By and large no one hogged either 14 or 19. Thunderpole vehicle/home base starter kits look great value too🤔👍✌️💜
Still got my ham international with highs, lows, mids, etc, SSB - although I think it probably needs rebuilding now, it barely worked 15 years ago! Also got a mids and uk40 more modern rig I forget the make - apparently you could open them up to highs and lows - maycom it might be? Used to have a 30 foot pole in back garden with a GPA on the top, then it was on T and K brackets on the house - got in trouble with the neighbours because when I put my 50watt burners on it knocked out their terrestrial TV 😂
That loop antenna is a good thing. However the way you were using it put you in horizontal polarization. You need to have the loop facing in the flat horizontal plane to give you vertical polarization.
"You need to have the loop facing in the flat horizontal plane to give you vertical polarization." Another example of RUclips misinformation. Here's another opinion. "Thus mounting the loop in a horizontal plane will produce an omnidirectional antenna which is horizontally polarized; mounting the loop vertically yields a vertically polarizated, weakly directional antenna, but with an exceptionally sharp nulls along the axis of the loop" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loop_antenna
My first experience was us going into a CB shop in Milton Keynes (which didn't sell CB rigs, no siree. They sold aerials only, honest guv). where the man took out an illegal CB from under the counter and handed the contraband over to my brother's friend. We drove round for a few hours making contact with others. It was all very cloak and dagger. Great fun.
Going through london in our Skoda on the way to South of France for a holiday in my mates car the evening before Charles and Diana's wedding in 81 I think, the mag mount on the roof got us pulled up by the cops and I was arrested and put in a cell for the evening, and my President AR40 was confiscated, can you imagine nowadays looking at that as a "crime" with what goes on? I loved that little radio. Next year I went to same place our CW caravanette was robbed Ham Major M588 and Zetagi B300p nicked. Gave up mobile then!
First on CB in 1979.Met my wife on there. Married in 1984 and will be celebrating our 40th wedding anniversary this year in May 24. Im 60 years old now and still have a Cobra 148gtldx but its packed away in the loft. Should I get it out and give it a try?
Here in Canberra Australia, our CB split up a long time ago into 27Meg AM and 447Meg FM. Both bands are legitimate CB here - but the UHF FM has become the popular way to go. By the way - and not to be too rude - in Canberra some of us don't answer radio checks if people don't say 'please'. We think it's just manners to just say, "Can I have a radio check please?". Some people just pop up and basically assume that everyone's your buddy and of course we're just sitting here waiting for you to bark at us "Radio check! Radio check!". I understand your habits over there are different.
1993 when I was at high school, me and all my mates had midland or uniden riggs, either a car battery or power pack as power, and convinced parents to put a silver rod on the house. I was reaching 25-30 miles over to Blackpool. Many happy memories. Thinking about taking up ham radio lately.
In the mid-late 80’s all my high school buddies installed CBs in our cars/trucks to talk n plan on partying on weekends and keep up with where we were going for fun. Everyone used them in my deer camp to communicate while running dogs and such. I miss those days. And before police encrypted their comms, I had a police scanner in my car. While we’d all be out drag racing we’d listen for the calls to come in, and new when to trailer the cars and get out of there. Then cell phones came out and took away the need for all our CBs. Those were the days.
I thought CB radio had long died with advent of mobile phones and the internet. I had a cb back in the day early 1980's in west london living i a block of flats think it was a midland not sure of the model number and there was quite a bunch of us in my local and there was this guy and his handle was Buffalo 1 and he was the guy you went to for any repairs and i remember his house was a mess bike engines in various states of repair in his living room great guy we used to get together in his house with other cb'ers for a chat and a few beers, great memories back in the day. Do people still use handles for there radio names? Great to hear that there is still a following for cb radio.
I used to love CB radio, it was good fun in Bournemouth, Dorset, many years ago, but we all had aerials on the roof to get the long range, many hours spent talking to others many miles away, thanks for the video BigBob out
I used to be part of the Pink Panther DX club down in the Channel Islands, I used to have a CB shack in my bedroom with various aerials all over the house. You used to be able to DX well with a wet noodle and CB radio back in the 80s. I used to get DX cards from all over the world. You’ve inspired me, I’m going to have to buy one!
CB is a great introduction to the magic of radio. Cellphones just don't do it. After CB, people really stricken with the radio bug can move to HAM. I did that when I was 16. Has served me my whole life.
I had one in the early 80's when i was a kid. Cant remember the make but started off with a mag mount stuck to a biscuit tin then progressed to a wall mounted ariel bolted to side of parents house. Had lots of fun with it and made a lot of friends. Happy care free days.
Good vid. Ive been thinking of getting into this. I had a rig in 95. Massive antenna and could speak to people quite a distance away. Met some local girls and met up in a field. We were only 13 lol.
Wish we could use something like that in our Explorer. Wife wants no cables etc in her car and I can see that. Problem is those short ant. I have talked with a pal and he had a hand held in a car with a regular ant. on it (had to stick it out the window). It sounded like a regular cb in our trucks. In my Ram I have a cobra with a short ant. to clear garage. You do not get out far.🦇
When I was maybe 8ish years old, some time around 1990, I had a mobile 'Realistic' CB rigged up on my bicycle with a stack of D cell batteries duct taped together LOL!
Great video Andy. Still have my Harvard 410 T handset in the garage. That was 2 Watts back in the day. Thunderpole TX is 4 watts? Love CB. Back in the day i had a centre load modulator drilled through the roof of my first car. Midland 77-104, Zetagi B150. Best contact was Jersey (from Cambridge) Still have my old Stalker 9 in the loft. Happy days !
Got my call sign in 1972 as a Merit Badge in Boy Scouts, for RADIO-TELEPHONY 👍✌️ KZS-0130 My first radio was a Radio Shack 3 channel (6 crystals) with a 1/4 wave Tandy antenna. 👍 Boy, I was the big man in our Troop. It's been an awful lot of fun. Pop's always said, "The difference between men and boys, was the cost of their toys." Love your videos Sir, and your music. Be safe and God bless. 73's from 107 The Village Idiot Big D 27.4200 Dallas, Texas
This brings back great memories of the 80's when I would stay at the house with the base station and my brother would get on his bike and ride as far as he can before going out of range. So much fun and magical.We were just kids exploring the mysteries of the world. Now we have our own homes and lives in neighboring towns but decided to get back into CB by putting up base station antennas at our homes and buying the new FM capable SSB/AM CBs on the market. We still have our Ham licenses so we may get the one that also has 10 meters. The magic never goes away. Who knows, maybe the kids will get into it.
So many memories, was absolutely brilliant times, 1983 first cb was an Amstrad 901 with a di-pole on a 15ft scaffy in the back garden and 50watt burner, passed car test in 87 and that was it, escort mk2 1600 sport midland 2001 and 100watt burner (so many flat batteries) and a mag mount. Met my first wife on the CB. All my mates had them in cars we had a scream, so many fun times, wish i could turn the clock back.
I hear you, wish I could go back to those times too, we had 'em in our cars and as base stations etc. AM was the best fun✌️🤞👍😊💜
... and then mobile phones happened. enough said.
Title heads up from an old breaker,19 is not the calling channel! 14 is! And that's what killed it. All the kids with a cb chattering about school and boyfriends/girlfriends! The guys who needed the channel ,truckers mainly,had to put up with inane rubbish every day,it got so bad a lot of us used ch9 out of desperation which went against everything us old hands did. I started with a midland straight 40 and a dx27 twig. I gave up when the government decided we could have 27fm legally with a licence,and then it died,we had a good relationship with the local police when we were on the illegal am radios,helping them on searches for kids that hadn't come home etc or a person who's head was in a bad place. We would go out in a team of about 10-15 cars and work with the police to find them,most of the time successfully. Once the kids and idiots started we just gave up,some stayed with sidebanding for international copies but other than that nothing,I've still got my old midland from about 15 years ago as I thought it may have improved but it's not a patch on the old days. Sad really,my son does ham radio and hes trying to get me on it as well which I may try. Oh and i met my wife on there too,ladybird,been together 41 years until she passed away feb. Anyway,3's and 8's to all old breakers,10 10 til we do it again,shadow down and gone!
@@derrickmanning2597 I do recommend giving Ham Radio a try. I'm not bashing CB or GMRS, both fine and those might also suit you depending on what you are looking for. Ham Radio takes a bit more effort to get the license, but there are so many bands, modes, and aspects to ham radio. And, there are so many really different groups. If you don't like one, try another.
@craigsaunders3532 yeh bro u bring back memories, had one in my Ford capri 2.0s fishnet recaro seats , big ass bendy antenna and shouting on the side side “ breaker 19 for a copy what’s your handle lol ❤❤❤❤
I met my husband through CB radio in the 80’s, we’ve been married 34 years now 😁
I met my ex wife on CB....at the wedding when her father gave his speech he told everybody ( in case they didn't already know ) that his daughter and I had met on the CB...then he continued on by saying that he'd been jumping feet first on it since !
same here😃
Good to hear! I live in California and I've always had a CB under the dash in my truck. I've often considered taking the radio out because I never used it. Until a few years ago while driving across the desert to visit friends in Arizona I came across a roll over accident. Other motorists had stopped but none of us had cell service in this area because it was so remote. However, I was able to contact CA Highway Patrol on my radio and get help. Even if I never encounter this situation again I will always keep a radio on hand as an emergency backup.
Remember getting a cb in 1984.. 14 was the calling channel and 19 then was used by truckers, then gat taken over by everyone. Great memories. Thanks Andy
Yep 14 was the breaking channel .. 19 for the Truckers....
84, you missed the best bits 😛😛😛😛
14 on AM 19 on FM if my memory serves me correctly
@@dean-gm1lg UK FM was 14 for calling, 19 was the trucker channel
@@dean-gm1lg 14 was more widely used than 19 of FM round here.
My Dad had a CB in his car for most of the 80s. Unfortunately he passed away last year and I'd have loved to share this video with him but still brought back great memories.
Everyone needs to get one. We're going to need them.
This brings back so many memories from the 80s, brilliant times when people helped each other out. Saving a young lad's life back in the early 80s after he rolled his car, with the nearest phone box being miles away, having lots of fun doing WALLEY hunts, chatting to others miles away when the skip was bad, and not being able to call someone just up the road. Happy memories and fun times, when people helped each other out.
Hey Andy. I still have my Ham international multimode 2 from the 1970s and it still works! I got back into radio about 4 years ago and there's no one about round here. I then went and got my amateur licence and there's no one on 2 metres either. . . Luckily I love DX and remember my first contact into Italy on 27mhz when I was at college and I was hooked. Great hobby and I think that CB was the first platform of social media and the internet sadly took over. The radio looks great. Keep the videos coming. 73's
I'm sure it used to be 14 for breaking and the truckers used 19. Then everyone went away, the farms bought PMR, hauliers got vodafone, small businesses got SBR. CB was good it worked everywhere, still can't get a decent mobile signal.
Yeah 14
definitely 14 as the calling channel, and 19 for truckers, and was not 09 used as the emergency channel ?
Yeh 1-4 for a copy, or 1-9 for a copy for the truckers and channel 9 was the emergency channel 😁
Where I grew up it was Channel 14 for the breaking channel and 19 for the truckers channel
@@simonbaldwin69agreed
From middle of 1987 to the middle of 1990 I used the CB radio regulary. Met 3 ex girlfriends from just being on the airs in Surrey. Met friends and had great laugh out loud moments on the CB airwaves. I couldn't replicate those days or would I because the memories I will cherish for always. Great video and thank you for sharing.
I spent hours each night chatting to folk in them brilliant memories
When I was into CBs (early 80s) - channel 14 was the general "pickup" channel - channel 19 was for truckers and mobile people. Channel 9 was for emergencies. You'd go on channel 14 and say "one for for a copy" 🙂When you got someone you'd say "pick a window" (i.e. pick a channel) and of you'd go for chat! Happy fun days. The channels were packed. Sometimes you'd just sit and listen to people arguing!
27 was also a breaking channel if I remember correctly used mostly by planks 😂
Those were the days! You could walk into Comet or Tandy and come out a ‘breaker’ lol 😂
I had a handheld Binatone which took about 40 AA batteries lol. It looked more like an army field radio, with its massive telescopic chrome antenna and chunky frame.
I remember setting up my rig on my bike, with a car battery on the pannier rack, a dx27 mounted on the rear light mount, and the rig on the front light mount. The mike was draped over the handlebars.
I used to get a lot of weird looks as I cycled round my home town chatting to people.
Good times 😁
Is that Matthew who lived in Hitchin?
@@PaulStrickland no Paul, I guess there was more than 1 cyclist with the same idea 😀
Oh you lucky bugger! I dreamed of this set setup as a kid, however it wasn’t a dx27 it was a dv27😊
Great video as always.. amazing how many people comment here about how nice cb radio used to be. Well it still is and we make sure to keep cb radio alive. 73's from Toronto.!!
Kept us entertained after lights out at boarding school back in the early 80's....
Truckers happy to chat! :-)
Hi , 73s , Unit 21 here , my home channel is CH 23 , and CH 9 , I am in Brooklyn NY , and I talk everyday to Puerto Rico on CH 9 from Brooklyn , with a window antenna " Hustler" ,during hurricane Maria I was in PR with no electricity for 3 months , so I had to use a car battery and a Astron 99 base ant very low in height , with a very small radio , and I made it to the USA with that setup , so I would say that CB for me worked very good in a time of need when the cell service was down , 5 stations in the USA picked me up and took my info , and called my aunt in NYC to let her know I was ok , so CB for me will never die , I wish all cars came with CB radios , that would be so much fun , I have had so much fun since my childhood with this , so sad todays kids are missing out on this , every time my grandkids come over I give them the mic and they have a blast talking on it . 73s from Unit 21 (WP4WF on HAM BANDS and WREJ-401 on GMRS ) the sky is the limit take advantage of free internet communications out there . Alfred unit 21 on ch 23 /9 73s
Very nice video Andy! You make CB and Ham Radio fun! Well done! Nate, NC, USA
Was from watching yours & Lewis's videos on the T-X that i decided tk recently purchase 1, even if its only to use once a blue moon, compare it with the Midland Portapak 27-805, old v new.
Great video, 👋 Mrs K, pleasure to meet you 🙂
I have still got my NATO 2000 from the good old days. I had loads of offers for it but I cannot bear to let it go. So many great memories
First time on cb was about 1979. My mates dad had one hidden under the seat of his van, remember it was illegal back then.in 81 had a harrier Cbx for Christmas and met my future wife. Later acquired a ssb set and worked the world. In 91 gained ham licence which I now use ,but still hold fond memories of the cb and still occasionally have a go. I do think it will become more popular again but never in the numbers we saw back then. It is a shame the truckers seem to have abandoned it as it was a useful tool for traffic reports etc.
Met my wife on cb we youst to do human fox hunts at night cool memories loved it
In my day back in the 60s it was 14 for a copy. I had a CB in my car with an external aerial and another home base and the same setup. We would talk for hours on these both set ups.
Yes, here in North Yorkshire late 1970's early 80's it was 14 for a a copy and channel 19 was for truckers.
i remember it was "one four for a copy" and voice came back "it's cheating to copy" or something Then at early hours in morning 14 went dead and in towns that had a motorway near them switched to 19 to talk to a bored trucker going past
It's a shame 14 fell out of favour around 1982-ish as being the calling channel. Having a separate "mobile users" channel 19 was a neat idea if only it had stuck.
@@simonblandford1002 how it was used before legalised that set the convention for 14. During daytime hours only truckers used 19 and they didn't want talk to fixed homebase rigs because of the skip made every conversation too short. So why separate 14 non-trucker calling channel, that convention carried through to legal CB along with other calling channels 8 for women's, 9 for gay, etc etc
When it changed from AM to FM that dramatically changed the culture and mode of operation, and the peculiar thing is many the conventions from AM needed out of utility, got carried through to legal CB and practiced like a religion!
I started CB with an AM rig in the 70s, fun trying to go undetected.
just fitted a CB radio to my mazda bongo campervan ....love it
I had a radio hooked up in my bedroom with a car battery charger hooked up to a car battery, then 2 screws screwed into the connectors, and the cb radio connected to the screws 😅 had plenty of laughs on there, all starting with a simple "1 9, 1 9 for a roger?" 😂👌
Like most of the other contributors here, I had a couple of CB's in the early 80's. At that time they were all AM (amplitude modulation). It's a vague memory now, but I think my last was a Midland 240M (my little Cobra got stolen out of the car). Fitted into a Fiat 131 Mirafiori using a 'snatch plate' with a Valour Half Breed antenna (whip). The 10-codes were a bugger to learn though!
Great memories. 1982, I was 13 at the time and had a Midland 401 with a Wotpole aerial on the side of the house. It was pretty good too considering it was totally legal. Silver Rod was the one to get though.
Those eyeball cards were good as well, some great designs as I remember.
Rippy, I'd forgotten about the "QSL" cards! That aspect alone was super fun!
I had my 1st CB in my bedroom in 1981 when it became legal. FM. It was a great part of my life. I still have the books in the loft of who I talked to what poundage they were hitting me on "yea your blowing my windows out c'mon" 😂what their 20 was & all that. As things progresses I joined a CB club. Where met up every week. Thinking about it now its pretty insane. You couldn't let your kids do that these days. As soon as I started driving trucks in 91 I had a CB. I then passed HGV 1 in 92 & went abroad for 4-6 weeks at a time. Every truck had a CB. Years later. 2008 to be exact I put a CB I found in the loft in my F350 Super Duty. I thought it is broken from sitting in the loft for years. Went and bought a new one & the same. Dead as a door nail. As in nobody on it at all. One night on my way to Scotland I just left it turned on with squelch up a bit. All of a sudden ooop north I almost jumped out of my seat as I heard a guy on there. I had a brief chat as I passed his town. He was almost as excited as I was. I still have a couple, but don't use them. Good video. I like the way your Mrs was humouring your excitement and getting involved. That was nice to see. 10 10 good buddy.
Good memories had a cb in the 80s in Holland and had contacts in Italy and Spain, got caught a couple of times but got a new one every time. But great fun with same minded enthusiasts.
I wish there was more activity in my area, all I hear is the obnoxious skip coming out of the southeast. I'm a ham too, and there's plenty of activity there, but there's something charming about CB.
I had a York rig and a fire stick, and some massive 22ft one on the house roof.
Chanel 14 was the calling channel ( In London anyway...and from 1981 ) and channel 19 was for mobile users.
Channel 19 was the truckers channel and 14 was for everyone else when I started I seem to remember
One-nine rig check
@@ricksanchez3628 receiving you loud and proud breaker
I did not know it ever left. Thanks for the video. I have 2 Hand held CB's. Like them. Mine are 75-822. But I am sure many others are just as good. Yours looks like a very good cb radio. I also have a couple that were once in my truck. I think they are 23 channel.
My dad was an avid CBer back in the 80's, I have very fond memories from back then when he started on the illeagal AM systems then it was legalized. I had my own handle and my dad even set up a CB club at a local pub that was based fairly high up semi rural so was great for distance. Had such great times as a child and great friendships. It was a great way to make friends as well.
I may even think of getting back into it after seeing this
My dad had the fire stick aerial on his car and then the K40.
Happy days missed so dearly
Yup, CB radio was extremely fun when I used to live in Orlando, Florida. I will never forget the Central Florida Sideband Net which met on channel 37 LSB every Saturday night back in the late 1980's, I'm glad to see CB radio hanging in there despite the advent of the internet and affordable cell phones. GMRS radio is now becoming very popular here in the US.
All the internet did was help out CB and also the affordable cell phones you still have to deal with the middleman paying that bill and social media in reality is not really that sociable actually gmrs radio has really taken off and so has CB I'm a ham radio operator ham radio CB and gmrs and I can tell you that for the past few days I've been on CB talking worldwide and have not used by ham radio equipment in the past few days everything has been done on CB even the application Tik Tok is being used to promote CB
That a great HT. I got one in the US. use it all the time. I took a very long telescopic antenna measured 11 meters 1/4 wave tuned it and put on HT . hard to hold but got out great. I did clip a counterpoise wire and drop it to ground. better tune. 73's USA ,NY
So many fond memories, I used to be big in cb until about 2002 when I got my ham license, I could still do it yet but there’s some people on there I don’t care to talk to, mud dusk is one of them. I’m in the us so I don’t know if I can get the thunder pole to but it’d be nice if I could though.
I used to love my CB. Used to have a silver rod strapped to the chimney. Everyone’s TV used to go off whenever you keyed your mic. 😂
I’ve got a Randy 3 coming today.
I remember breaking down in an old Allegro. It was a cold winters night and the snow was about 6 inches deep.
I called for help on channel nine and someone contacted my family by land line. It took about two hours for them to get to me. It’s something I’ll never forget. My handle was the collector back in the eighties.
Can’t believe you admitted to driving an Allegro! 😂
In 1981 it used to be Channel 9 for emergency, 14 was the norm for general calling and 19 was the mobiles general calling. Still got my Uniden rig and handheld unit with a 2 foot plus telescopic aerial takes 10 AA batteries and is chunk as hell. Good days though.
In the US channel 19 was always the "truckers" channel. Usually the most active. The thirties were routinely used for QSOs with SSB
Ahh going up to the highest point around with the cobra 19gtl and the sound of the kc switch as its tuned in. Good old days. Eyeball eyeball.
I got a Midland 2001 rig from a car boot aged about 13, Dad was a shortwave listener so helped me rig up a half wave. Made loads of friends on the rig, Channel 19 was always busy and channel 39 was Monday night Swap Shop where people would buy and sell stuff. Lots of eyeballs, loads of fun. I often wonder what it's like these days.
I loved the CB radio back when I was 13 yrs old in 1992, use to speak to my mates after school, an early social network but using radio instead of computers. Great video thanks for posting.👍
Great memories of pinching scaffold poles to put the Sigma 4 on, had a Silver Rod as well two quality twigs.
I wired in a CB radio to my TS50 bike in 1998! I used to keep in contact with my mum via CB radios. Mobile phones were not a thing so as we lived on top a massive hill in Brighton we just used CB radios to keep in contact all through my childhood! I had Midlands hand held radio from around 1993/4. The CB radio was in the kitchen. I never knew how magical them times were. My mates thought it was weird but we were a massive CB family! pretty much our whole family was on channel 38. it was much cheaper than the home phone to talk. people forget that you used to have to pay per minutes on home phones!
Love the video all power to resurrecting use of CB in the UK.. I started back in 81 when cb first started under the call sign Paperclip. I then moved on to amatuer 2m. My interest has been re-awoken.... Hope to hear some day down here in Cornwall!!.
Brings back many memories. I use to have my antenna on a biscuit tin and worked quite well, as well as taking the rig out it on the road. Brill for going to different towns and getting directions.
Brilliant !! Are the 27 AM set - as the Americans use , I used to love listening to the "Skip " but then it became 27FM .- Not the Same !
i bought 6 President Randys . All of the antennas fell apart . I purchased aftermarket HYS antennas plus BNC to TNT adapters so we could continue to use the radios. Where can I buy these radios ? I want the European version because they still use USA frequencies. Im here in New York City
Hello, Andy. Even with a 40db pre-amp, not one English voice on CB down here on the south coast on the old UK frequencies. Mids, packed out with the whole of the northern hemisphere, and even a bit of the south. Did try on FM to get a radio check, but nothing. Back to listening to short-wave. Good to see you've got a few friends to chat to up there.
I had CB Radio years ago 90s I think. I never had great setup just handheld and car antenna plus I never had swr done. Mainly I just use to listen in. But I getting one again it's the same one you got Thunderpole T-X I like to get better antenna in time but I can't have anything too large that's only only problem. But like you say no way round it as bigger is better with cb antennas. I living with me mum maybe I can persuade her for me to install a di pole.
I n Bristol we had a shop called KERNOW TRADING and you could buy anything it was am but was it not outlawed and the fm sets came in. Both my sets were installed in my escort van when I was working for ROSS & BONNYMAN and I fitting tailifts to trucks etc, oh that was the days sitting on the Durham Downs in Bristol talking to everybody, passing messages, directions, but then the radio vans started to start tracking us down. One night I was coming over the old Severn bridge and I got wind of a blockade on the English side so I unplugged my am set and put down the side of my van, if you know old escort vans there was a gap outside of the rear floor to the side, so the van lining you pull away from the side and slip the am set inside of the gap below the floor. Yes I got stopped yes they did search my van but never found the set that felt so good and I could still chat and make friends.
First cb radio was vice president Roy 40 ch AM.
Then got a pulser 800, then ham international jumbo.
Thanks for posting, great little handheld.
73s from 68WR048 in Co Antrim N. Ireland good bud.
Good old days, My first C.B. was a Midland 2000 on A.M. back in 1978, worked my way up to a sideband radio, had a 7 foot red firestick in the middle of the boot on an old Jag I had, brings back great memories
I had a Red firestick on top of a mini metro..magmount..couldn't go too fast😅
@@TheRogey1 rabbits ears?
Rabbits eras were 2 arials on one mount in a V shape
My patents also had CB radios. One at home (countryside) as a base station with big antenna. Other were on cars as a mobile. With neighbours working at forest were able to communicate and exchange information. On that time we had only 22 channel radios and amplitude and frequency modulations (AM/FM). During sunspot activity we got connections all over the globe, it was exciting!
But when I moved to study into high school, parents also left farming. But I got personally interested about radios and communication. So I got HAM license (but no radio hw) and went to tech university to study telcomm. And then we got internet... until recently I got interested about radios again.
Good Good memories of cb's back in the day..my handle was Butcher boyhad a midland set up in my bedroom..brilliant..quite handy these days with the threat of Nuclear war
Hi Andy. Cb is very much still very popular. In my area Bolton we use AM channel 6 midband. We talk to the yanks all the time. My set up is a cobra 148 gtl dx amplifier is a cp-163-11 4 element yagi. . Never got bored of cb even after getting my full licence on ham radio. Currently building a 1k Watts amp at 60v from a server psu. Keep up the good work Andy love your vids. 26tm176 John 73,s
Ringway is the old name for manchester airport, I'm sat in my lounge not more than 5 miles from there and I can hear you loud and proud so the chances are so can he. Catch you on the flip flop good buddy, 10-4
Awesome memories my call sign was barney bear there's was loads on back then 👍
I still have my Midland 100m in the loft somewhere I used to run on a DV27 antenna,that was before they brought in CB27 81 .😊
My first CB was from Tandy, a Realistic something or other, 40 channels FM only and barely enough power to make it to the end of the street with a good wind behind it. Got a midland one for my first car which was much better and lasted well into the late 1990's. Now have the Randy 3, what a difference 20 years make with the quality of the rigs these days.
I had mine from Tandy too it was a Harrier if I remember rightly.good times.
@@PhilMozchops1974 yep me too, a portable midland with telescopic antenna from Tandy in meadowhall the first year it opened. Them were the days 😢
I’ve said for the last 10 years or so we should all have a cb radio, way things are going I don’t think it’d take much to collapse the mobile phone network in the U.K. when you look what an over exaggerated bat flu can do!
I miss tandy
Fantastic windup back in the 80s my handle was lighting my mate like roadrunner chopper and snowballs great times 1/4 do you copy what twigg up pushing to much swelch nose 😂😂
Still got my first CB from 1981 - a Colt 210 AM, and my first FM set from the same year - a Binatone 5 Star. Both still work great although I very rarely use them now as there's nobody on around here.
(on the side) lol snap i still have my rotel 240 with modded in mid band as they called it back then,my mate had the 5 star too lol.
in the late 70s i bought a stalker (forgot what model) imported via back of a lorry from usa. had usb and lsb, used to be great listning to that. it only had 23 channels and old wooden teak effect,
Hi Andy I have got some good memories of cb, I met my wife through the cb bad memories I got busted on Reigate hill I took a scaffold pole and a gpa strapped to a 5 bar gate I had a Maxcom 4e and a 45w burner was doing great then the police arrived apparently I was knocking out the police in north London oops I had no idea and would have not done it intentionally they confiscated the burner and I got fined £250 which was quite a lot then it didn't put me off cb great times made a lot of friends, keep up the good work Andy.
Good old days on cb radio still got my cb radio plus my dear dad's radios now he has passed on
I remember channel 14 was the calling channel for getting a copy. For some reason it changed to channel 19.
I still have my hiighgain v and sigma 4 antenna..... must get it all set up one day 😅
Thanks for the video. Looking at maybe getting the Thunderpole. I'll not tell you how old I am but I had so much fun in the 70's using second-hand sets from the USA. Totally illegal and that's what made it fun !! Got a legal set as soon as they came out but the fun had gone !! Richard or 'The Bantam Racer' from Stevenage, Herts.
CB radio never went anywhere, real CB'ers have been out there this whole time!
I had an old midland 40 channel cb radio with an echo mic. When I first set it up I was using an old metal coat hanger as an aerial until my new one turned up. It worked well.
I used to have a Rotel RVC 240 iirc, (FM) and a Cobra 148GTLDX (Sideband & AM), plus a burner and half wave di-pole etc. Happier times on the whole, good friends made too.
Back in the day it was "14 for a copy" then select a channel to go to, iirc, if a trucker it was "19 for a copy" then move to a channel. By and large no one hogged either 14 or 19.
Thunderpole vehicle/home base starter kits look great value too🤔👍✌️💜
Still got my ham international with highs, lows, mids, etc, SSB - although I think it probably needs rebuilding now, it barely worked 15 years ago!
Also got a mids and uk40 more modern rig I forget the make - apparently you could open them up to highs and lows - maycom it might be?
Used to have a 30 foot pole in back garden with a GPA on the top, then it was on T and K brackets on the house - got in trouble with the neighbours because when I put my 50watt burners on it knocked out their terrestrial TV 😂
We used to call those short flexible antennas a "rubber duck"
That loop antenna is a good thing. However the way you were using it put you in horizontal polarization.
You need to have the loop facing in the flat horizontal plane to give you vertical polarization.
"You need to have the loop facing in the flat horizontal plane to give you vertical polarization."
Another example of RUclips misinformation. Here's another opinion.
"Thus mounting the loop in a horizontal plane will produce an omnidirectional antenna which is horizontally polarized; mounting the loop vertically yields a vertically polarizated, weakly directional antenna, but with an exceptionally sharp nulls along the axis of the loop"
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loop_antenna
My first experience was us going into a CB shop in Milton Keynes (which didn't sell CB rigs, no siree. They sold aerials only, honest guv). where the man took out an illegal CB from under the counter and handed the contraband over to my brother's friend. We drove round for a few hours making contact with others. It was all very cloak and dagger. Great fun.
Going through london in our Skoda on the way to South of France for a holiday in my mates car the evening before Charles and Diana's wedding in 81 I think, the mag mount on the roof got us pulled up by the cops and I was arrested and put in a cell for the evening, and my President AR40 was confiscated, can you imagine nowadays looking at that as a "crime" with what goes on?
I loved that little radio. Next year I went to same place our CW caravanette was robbed Ham Major M588 and Zetagi B300p nicked.
Gave up mobile then!
Nowadays a Facebook post or tweet can get you two years in the slammer.
First on CB in 1979.Met my wife on there. Married in 1984 and will be celebrating our 40th wedding anniversary this year in May 24. Im 60 years old now and still have a Cobra 148gtldx but its packed away in the loft. Should I get it out and give it a try?
Here in Canberra Australia, our CB split up a long time ago into 27Meg AM and 447Meg FM. Both bands are legitimate CB here - but the UHF FM has become the popular way to go.
By the way - and not to be too rude - in Canberra some of us don't answer radio checks if people don't say 'please'. We think it's just manners to just say, "Can I have a radio check please?". Some people just pop up and basically assume that everyone's your buddy and of course we're just sitting here waiting for you to bark at us "Radio check! Radio check!".
I understand your habits over there are different.
1993 when I was at high school, me and all my mates had midland or uniden riggs, either a car battery or power pack as power, and convinced parents to put a silver rod on the house.
I was reaching 25-30 miles over to Blackpool.
Many happy memories.
Thinking about taking up ham radio lately.
In the mid-late 80’s all my high school buddies installed CBs in our cars/trucks to talk n plan on partying on weekends and keep up with where we were going for fun. Everyone used them in my deer camp to communicate while running dogs and such. I miss those days. And before police encrypted their comms, I had a police scanner in my car. While we’d all be out drag racing we’d listen for the calls to come in, and new when to trailer the cars and get out of there. Then cell phones came out and took away the need for all our CBs. Those were the days.
I thought CB radio had long died with advent of mobile phones and the internet. I had a cb back in the day early 1980's in west london living i a block of flats think it was a midland not sure of the model number and there was quite a bunch of us in my local and there was this guy and his handle was Buffalo 1 and he was the guy you went to for any repairs and i remember his house was a mess bike engines in various states of repair in his living room great guy we used to get together in his house with other cb'ers for a chat and a few beers, great memories back in the day. Do people still use handles for there radio names? Great to hear that there is still a following for cb radio.
From memory channel 30 was the old UK call channel.
I had a Rotel rvc 220 when I was 15 it was great fun
I used to love CB radio, it was good fun in Bournemouth, Dorset, many years ago, but we all had aerials on the roof to get the long range, many hours spent talking to others many miles away, thanks for the video BigBob out
I used to be part of the Pink Panther DX club down in the Channel Islands, I used to have a CB shack in my bedroom with various aerials all over the house. You used to be able to DX well with a wet noodle and CB radio back in the 80s. I used to get DX cards from all over the world. You’ve inspired me, I’m going to have to buy one!
CB is a great introduction to the magic of radio.
Cellphones just don't do it.
After CB, people really stricken with the radio bug can move to HAM. I did that when I was 16. Has served me my whole life.
10-4 good buddy! When I think of CB, I imagine a Burt Reynolds mustache from Smokey and the Bandit movie 😂
Thats wicked , i Use to have a radioshack handheld one when i was a kid 👍
Hi Andy would you be able to use this as a cab for a car to talk to trucks
I had one in the early 80's when i was a kid. Cant remember the make but started off with a mag mount stuck to a biscuit tin then progressed to a wall mounted ariel bolted to side of parents house. Had lots of fun with it and made a lot of friends. Happy care free days.
Good vid. Ive been thinking of getting into this. I had a rig in 95. Massive antenna and could speak to people quite a distance away. Met some local girls and met up in a field. We were only 13 lol.
Where did you get your thunderbolt from ?
With the radio can you use it straight out of the box on a full charge
Breaker breaker on the side.? ......on the side come alive!.
Im so pleased I was an 80s kid..
Wish we could use something like that in our Explorer. Wife wants no cables etc in her car and I can see that. Problem is those short ant. I have talked with a pal and he had a hand held in a car with a regular ant. on it (had to stick it out the window). It sounded like a regular cb in our trucks. In my Ram I have a cobra with a short ant. to clear garage. You do not get out far.🦇
God I miss the rig good the old days
Going for an eyeball to find out you've been chatting up a minger for three months 😂😂😂
😅😅😅😅👆🏼👆🏼👆🏼👆🏼 this!!!!😅😅😅😅
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😊
When I was maybe 8ish years old, some time around 1990, I had a mobile 'Realistic' CB rigged up on my bicycle with a stack of D cell batteries duct taped together LOL!
Great video Andy. Still have my Harvard 410 T handset in the garage. That was 2 Watts back in the day. Thunderpole TX is 4 watts? Love CB. Back in the day i had a centre load modulator drilled through the roof of my first car. Midland 77-104, Zetagi B150. Best contact was Jersey (from Cambridge) Still have my old Stalker 9 in the loft. Happy days !
Got my call sign in 1972 as a Merit Badge in Boy Scouts, for RADIO-TELEPHONY 👍✌️ KZS-0130
My first radio was a Radio Shack 3 channel (6 crystals) with a 1/4 wave Tandy antenna. 👍 Boy, I was the big man in our Troop.
It's been an awful lot of fun. Pop's always said, "The difference between men and boys, was the cost of their toys."
Love your videos Sir, and your music. Be safe and God bless.
73's from 107 The Village Idiot Big D 27.4200
Dallas, Texas