woody
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2010
- Messages
- 1,094
- Location
- Central Alabama
- Tractor
- Kubota B26, Kubota ZG222, Kubota L45, 1980 Ford 1700
Yes I still use a CB.
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I was thinking of installing a CB radio in my Ford F150. I used to have a magnetic antenna for my car. The ford is all aluminum, and I don't know how to put it on without drilling holes. Anybody figured out a good setup?
Thanks
Dave
LOL good point. Darn new fangled #*#&Do trucks even have stake pockets anymore?
Speakerphone mode?We use them when the car club tours to keep in touch.
Cell Phone wouldn’t work as no hands free option with a Model T or Model A.
It was very easy to record radio traffic even in the 70's. All you needed was a reel to reel tape recorder (yes, old school, but I had one, lol) hooked to a "speaker out" jack on the radio receiver. FCC would have had a more elegant setup than one of us "garage guys" could cobble together.I think they will make a comeback when the realization that cell phones calls & texts are not private conversations.
Don’t know if CB talk can be “recorded” or monitored the same way as cell phones.
I have the antennas & mounts in the farm tractors, but I opted for some quality walkie talkies and they work pretty good For farming.
How's the range on those little things? A typical half dipole (aka "whip") antenna for CB radio should be about 9 ft long, if placed over a metal car roof (creates reflector / full dipole). You can shorten the required length with compensating coils, but these impact performance, and there's definitely a limit in how short you can go without blowing the whole deal.Get a through the glass CB antenna. Have one on my F350 on the rear window.