Can't imagine wanting the standard RCI drift, noise and lousy audio over a Uniden-built classic from the 70s or 80s, rock-solid on frequency, much better filtering and no need for hacking and clipping to outperform anything with Ranger guts.
Can't imagine wanting the standard RCI drift, noise and lousy audio over a Uniden-built classic from the 70s or 80s, rock-solid on frequency, much better filtering and no need for hacking and clipping to outperform anything with Ranger guts.
I agree that is the base to have these day, my old Galaxy Dx 2517 still has a lot to offer but I would like to be able to listen to 10 and 12 meter. There is a reason those big black radios have been around so long, good form factor. Btw my 2517 is stable but my power level is set pretty much to the service manual specifications (a little less am carrier due to npc-rc) anyways going to try slow scan tv with it as soon as I get my hands on a usb sound card.If your going to spend that kind of money on a cb radio base station. Pass it by and get this instead. The 2547 can't even compare! Been running this for 6 months with ZERO drift and 100 watts pep all day long.
(New board)
RCI 69 Base Plus++ (new version white LEDs) | The Radio Garage
Newest version with all white LEDs for meters and frequency/channel digitsFeatures2 Year Factory WarrantyMade In MalaysiaNew BoardFine Coarse Clarifier5 Digit Frequency CounterWhite DigitsBuilt In FanVariable Power100 Watts +AM/FM/SSB/CW ModesRF GainMic GainEchoHi/Lo Frequency Switch10/12 Meter...www.theradiogarage.com
It would be nice to have a base box built in another black rack mount case to match it.Being a network engineer, anything rack mount is appealing to me. No, I don't have a rack at my radio desk, but I still stand firm on my opinion.
I would agree. It was somewhere in the '83 - '84 range. I think President was still advertising their lineup here in the states in late 1981. In 1984 I decided to update my station (I was using a Hy-Gain V + Hy-Gain v.f.o at the time). A co-worker thought the tax exempt number he had from a previous employer might still work, so we went the distributor he was familiar with and took a look at the two-radio section. The radio I bought was a Uniden Grant, which looked just like a President Grant on the outside. (now I'm looking at my notes). There seemed to be a lapse in President CB advertising at some point in '82, and by '84 the split had taken place - Uniden for North America, President everywhere else. My notes are fairly accurate, but my memory often reflects all the mileage it has accrued.Just wish I could remember what year the name on the front of that Grant model shown above changed from "President" to "Uniden". Some time in the early to mid 1980s?
73
And over $100 shipping in each case.Two new with one $350 and other $400. You want to for some reason discourage purchase by stating $600.
Exactly. I'll take my Grant XL over pretty much every thing else. I wouldn't mind picking up a clean Uniden base, or a clean cobra 2000.Can't imagine wanting the standard RCI drift, noise and lousy audio over a Uniden-built classic from the 70s or 80s, rock-solid on frequency, much better filtering and no need for hacking and clipping to outperform anything with Ranger guts.
Buy a Uniden Washington year 2000 CB for $250 on eBay then. Year 2000 does not need a rebuild. No nasty 1970s to early 1980s CBs for me. I believe serial number starting with a 0 are year 2000 (check this). This radio has three buttons on lower right front panel.And over $100 shipping in each case.
Again.... Basic solder skills one can easily make their old SSB radio last very long....I would rather own a new President McKinley vs an old SSB CB that costs more than the McKinley and needs all new capacitors for starters.