Most stock radios could sound good if unmodified and use a wideband audio section. Drive it to the peaks through a chain of mic>5kHz LPF (6 pole to roll off hard after 5kHz for least channel bleeding)>all pass brick wall limiter>diode peak clipper>high frequency limiter/filter to recude clipper audio harmonics>modulator stages of your rig.
This is almost exactly the same method used for broadcast AM stations except they include pre-emphasis stages and in modern times multi-band compression on the front end of the audio chain.
Doing this you peak up the audio using a tone generator and monitor the RF amplitude on a scope to make sure it is not clipping the waveform regardless of what crap is going in at the mic end, check for 100% modulation and no negative dropouts. All pass filters at the mic can help with asymmetrical audio which some peoples voice tend not to have (often going negative at peaks).
Do this and your signal will sound like the big boys, not just on CB but you can compare yourself to broadcasters on the professional end.
Best of all most of this can be done using software now, or basic circuitry if you have an understanding.
I recommend looking into broadcast audio processing manuals and documents, like those written by Orban and such.
When you get these basic things down and the scope (never lies) shows you modulating fully w/o distortion you will sound louder and more clear than almost everyone on the dial.
The issue is when people get to that point they start to question if they really want to sound that clear when they start talking smack