I use a 102" SS whip with mine and have no issues with receiving the weather stations.
Show me otherwise and prove it. Until then thank you for your opinion.
Thanks for the opinion. Facts outweigh opinions at least in the real world. In my world, identical components yield slightly different results in identical radios due to inconsistencies in their factory installed components. The sonar equipment I worked on in the Navy was a different matter. Tighter tolerances result in a higher cost per unit, but simplified alterations since we can use identical componens to achieve virtually identical results. The civilian world is a different ballgame with 20% tolerance components. To make improvements you can't just slap the same component in and expect identical results. Perhaps you could clue us in as to how your opinion was formed.
The civilian world is a different ballgame with 20% tolerance components.
I'm lost. I guess I just prefer a radio with a VFO, no channels and the clarifier is labeled RIT.
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It's now back in the box.
It's been on a few different antennas with the same results.
Playing with a Galaxy 959 at the moment.
I totally agree...Clarifier problems were never really an issue in the 23ch days when all the SSB radios were unlocked (same as having a mini VFO). The exception was those newcomers that had trouble comprehending what direction to turn their clarifier, simply by listening to a station that’s either too high pitched sounding or low pitched. Some gave up trying thinking that mode was just too difficult. With everybody being unlocked, frequency accuracy back then, was never a big issue either. Only the rare station had a frequency counter. The first station that initiated "the spot" (whatever frequency that was) automatically forced everyone in the group to tune their clarifiers in unison. Unlocked clarifiers kept everyone on the same page, and there was no need for any frequency counter for the righteous types to make comment about. One big happy family, problem solved. The problem with locked clarifiers arises when there are more than two of them in a group. As you know, most radios that are new, old, or recently so called “aligned” are not dead on frequency. With that fact in mind, your choices are limited regarding locked clarifiers in that situation. Either you constantly fiddle with the clarifier back and forth between stations, or find some compromise placement and consign yourself with hearing some abnormal pitched stations within the group. For me, a locked clarifier is a one on one radio, that's fine in most cases, but I like group conversations, just like VFO users demand on the ham bands. Locked clarifiers created this failure and they should have kept them unlocked...Enough said.Personally I don't have unlocked clarifiers on CB radios.
Some of our locals have them, some do not. We manage.
I think if they were all unlocked we would manage better but that's a preference.
Not everyone has frequency counters with a stable timebase nor is interested in having one so for them the simple answer is probably the unlocked clarifier.
Since my 4 year return to cb (after a 28 year sabbatical) I've discovered SSB. From 75-87 I only operated AM.I never understood the unlocked clarifier mod. If I have to move off frequency to dial some else in it can be a pain in the ass when more than 2 people are involved in the QSO and someone is off frequency.
I think cb shops convinced people they needed it so they could charge more for doing sloppy alignments on crappy radios. Make it adjustable and it's the customer's problem.