Tell us your story on how you got addicted to CB radio.
Here's mine:
My Dad wasn't a highly educated man, but he was brilliant. He was always wanting to learn about new things. In the 50s, he bought an ALLIED reel-to-reel tape recorder just to see what it was all about. He built and flew radio-controlled model airplanes. He built a '32 ford 3-window coupe hot rod that I just passed on to my son. When CB radio was introduced, he set up a base station on the 3rd floor attic of our farm house, and put a mobile in his pickup truck. We lived in Sheridan Indiana, and all of the farmers had a CB base and mobile. I remember his first base was a Johnson Black face with a crystal box , and a D&A phantom 500 linear. He had 2 antennas. a MAGNUM omni on the roof, and a Hy-Gain 3 element beam atop an old oak tree in our front yard. The oak had been killed by a lightning strike, and dad cut the top off and mounted the beam on the 50' that was left. He showed me how to operate his base, and let me use it when he was at work. He replaced the Johnson with a Sampson base radio (which I still have). I remember talking skip on his station. My favorite contacts were "TD - TRUCK DRIVER" in Phoenix, "FLYIN' TIGER" in San Francisco, and "Rag Doll"a female operator in Las Cruces, New Mexico. After a summer of shooting skip on my dad's station, I was hooked.
My first Cb was a Squire-Sanders 23er Mobile in my '59 Chevy El Camino. After I got married in 1961, I kinda got out of CB to concentrate on work and my family. After we moved to California in '81, I set up a base and started servicing CBs again. I had a Realistic TRC458 base, and a Galaxy 2100 mobile, with a TX600 amp, and a Francis AMAZER antenna. I talked Skip everywhere from My Toyota 4x4 Pickup.
We moved to Georgia in 1993, and because of work, family, and the HOA, CB took the back burner. When I retired, we moved to Colombia in 2007. I set up my station again, and talked skip until 2010, when a storm destroyed my antennas. Because of our businesses, the farm, and a lot of procrastination, I didn't get back on the air for over 13 years. Then an amatuer operator had his antenna setup for sale, and I bought it, and got back on the air.
Now I'm talking skip almost every day, and enjoying CBing again. Looking forward to talking to all of my forum members ASAP.
So . . . that's my story. Come on , you guys .... lets hear yours.
- 399
Here's mine:
My Dad wasn't a highly educated man, but he was brilliant. He was always wanting to learn about new things. In the 50s, he bought an ALLIED reel-to-reel tape recorder just to see what it was all about. He built and flew radio-controlled model airplanes. He built a '32 ford 3-window coupe hot rod that I just passed on to my son. When CB radio was introduced, he set up a base station on the 3rd floor attic of our farm house, and put a mobile in his pickup truck. We lived in Sheridan Indiana, and all of the farmers had a CB base and mobile. I remember his first base was a Johnson Black face with a crystal box , and a D&A phantom 500 linear. He had 2 antennas. a MAGNUM omni on the roof, and a Hy-Gain 3 element beam atop an old oak tree in our front yard. The oak had been killed by a lightning strike, and dad cut the top off and mounted the beam on the 50' that was left. He showed me how to operate his base, and let me use it when he was at work. He replaced the Johnson with a Sampson base radio (which I still have). I remember talking skip on his station. My favorite contacts were "TD - TRUCK DRIVER" in Phoenix, "FLYIN' TIGER" in San Francisco, and "Rag Doll"a female operator in Las Cruces, New Mexico. After a summer of shooting skip on my dad's station, I was hooked.
My first Cb was a Squire-Sanders 23er Mobile in my '59 Chevy El Camino. After I got married in 1961, I kinda got out of CB to concentrate on work and my family. After we moved to California in '81, I set up a base and started servicing CBs again. I had a Realistic TRC458 base, and a Galaxy 2100 mobile, with a TX600 amp, and a Francis AMAZER antenna. I talked Skip everywhere from My Toyota 4x4 Pickup.
We moved to Georgia in 1993, and because of work, family, and the HOA, CB took the back burner. When I retired, we moved to Colombia in 2007. I set up my station again, and talked skip until 2010, when a storm destroyed my antennas. Because of our businesses, the farm, and a lot of procrastination, I didn't get back on the air for over 13 years. Then an amatuer operator had his antenna setup for sale, and I bought it, and got back on the air.
Now I'm talking skip almost every day, and enjoying CBing again. Looking forward to talking to all of my forum members ASAP.
So . . . that's my story. Come on , you guys .... lets hear yours.
- 399