Getting CB peaked and tuned
#1
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 142
Hello all, long time no see. I just finished my 6 weeks on the road training. I recently got myself a brand new CB radio and my trainer said I would need to get it peaked and tuned at a CB shop for it to really be an effective radio. My question is, if I have to get this done at a CB shop, how will I have the time to do this on the road? Does it take a few hours to get it done if they get you in right away or what? I don't want to attempt to do anything to it myself because I don't know anything about CB radios. Any suggestions on how to find the time to get this done? How did you guys do it? Thanks in advance.
Tom
#4
Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Longview, Washington
Posts: 146
It pays to know your radio is "getting out" well. Have it set up at a shop you will be by once in a while. They should tell you about what they do and answer your questions also. "Talk back" a "power mic" and "echo" are things you can add. After messing with every setup out there, I wound up with a single antenna...found it to work the best and keeps it simple.
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Bad weather gets bad drivers off the road...one way or another! Fourcats
#5
Originally Posted by Fourcats
It pays to know your radio is "getting out" well. Have it set up at a shop you will be by once in a while. They should tell you about what they do and answer your questions also. "Talk back" a "power mic" and "echo" are things you can add. After messing with every setup out there, I wound up with a single antenna...found it to work the best and keeps it simple.
![]() Don't forget a "Roger Beep", so you can annoy the crap out everyone!! I really hate these things. Not necessarily when they are getting used in a normal fashion but when drivers just sit there and key up continuously just to be annoying, it makes me want to find them and rip their radio out of the truck and smash it into a million pieces. :twisted: :twisted:
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#6
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Kansas City, MO
Posts: 1,147
Originally Posted by tjv189
Hello all, long time no see. I just finished my 6 weeks on the road training. I recently got myself a brand new CB radio and my trainer said I would need to get it peaked and tuned at a CB shop for it to really be an effective radio. My question is, if I have to get this done at a CB shop, how will I have the time to do this on the road? Does it take a few hours to get it done if they get you in right away or what? I don't want to attempt to do anything to it myself because I don't know anything about CB radios. Any suggestions on how to find the time to get this done? How did you guys do it? Thanks in advance.
Tom Great way to transfer your money to the CB shops pocket. Very few of these CB shops have neither the knowledge nor the proper equipment to CORRECTLY tune a CB. Best advice is the old adage -- If it ain't broke -- Don't fix it. kc0iv
#7
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Planet Earth, Milky Way Galaxy
Posts: 937
what a joke, getting your cb peaked and tune will not transmit any farther than it does stock from the factory... when they tune it at your local ack shop they open up your mod circuit which will over mod the radio causing it to splatter across the cb band which will in effect loose power on the one channel your on, all that power is lost splattering across the band, whic all the power is no gain at all really its just your over mod will will cause tte radio to have a early death from over heating parts, only real professionals can modify a radio and them people are not in a local cb hack shop... for the price you pay them to destroy a good stock radio you could by a linear amp online and have more output power than 200 of them peaked radios and have clean modulation and not hurt the radio..
some say oh its bettter to make sure its getting out, well from the factory they made sure its getting out, getting out a good clean signal thats not over mod... but if you want to waste your money and your time to be like everyone else then thats your own doing, but if you do I will have to call you stupid... so please don't be stupid.. besides everyone else beat you to it, why follow them anyway, go your own way.... if you want power to be loud then get a linear amp and kick some but..... and sound good while transmitting too... thats better than what the rest of them did..
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The only good thing about winning is ..... your first next to losing!
#8
Board Regular
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: wa
Posts: 362
i always figue out these coaxial cables short between the body and the door before long and i wind up with a single antenna and coax thru the wing window til i get a new truck.these new trucks dont got wing windows and they wont like me drilling holes. we we will see what next. i get a new mic a couple times a year as we short them by the cb plug pretty often. we swap trucks every time one gets serviced and we got to have a cb at most mills.always patch something together
#9
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 142
So you guys are saying don't bother having it peaked or tuned by a CB shop, lets say I take it right out of the box, besides connecting the wires and antenna in the back, what do I have to do to get it to work?
#10
Originally Posted by tjv189
So you guys are saying don't bother having it peaked or tuned by a CB shop, lets say I take it right out of the box, besides connecting the wires and antenna in the back, what do I have to do to get it to work?
Sorry, couldn't resist |

