The audio amp circuit in a stock radio has an eq. In many radios it's fixed caps and is not adjustable. You can't tell me that all stock radios with a stock mic have a flat frequency response. What is the difference between a guy using the eq in his yaesu or connecting an eq to a lower end radio without a built in eq? Should he take the lazy route and just buy an appliance with the features he wants?
You aren't a fan of compression because you don't understand how to properly use it properly. What are you going to say next? ALC has no business being used on SSB? It's not a scam to sound like motor mouth maul. The peak limiter prevents over modulation which I think is a good thing. A properly adjusted compressor makes softer spoken words heard more clearly. Is there something wrong with using external limiting with more transparency to sound cleaner? Or should the person be lazy again? Maybe settle for what they have until they can upgrade to a better appliance.
I understand that you are happy operating an appliance and are happy with the audio that comes out of it. I will not fault you for that. Since you have no interest in this subject so you think the whole concept is stupid. Either that or you're trolling the CB forums again.
Boy are you wrong and quick to jump to conclusions. You missed the entire point. No use explaining it to you. You are trolling with your inexperience and wrong and ridiculous assumptions.
I have a lot of experience in using pro audio equipment and own some myself in my home studio recording shack with tube parametric EQ's, multiple tube and solid state compressors and other effects along with a 24 track digital ADAT recorder and 24 channel mixer that I can easily integrate with my Radio gear if I wanted.
" I'm not a fan of compression because I don't know how to use it??? " Get real!!! I can go into detail on how compression works but this isn't a audio forum. I did give the basics previously on how and why it is used in the recording field.
My point still stands that you missed...
The more processing done to a signal, the more further away from the truth you get. That's a fact!!!
Motor mouth maul is a classic example on how over processed a simple signal can sound and often when I heard him, he was buried alive since heavy audio sound can't cut through when signals and band conditions are less than ideal. Obviously you are a fan of his and probably worships everything he says and I insulted you.
Whether Ham or CB, this isn't HI-FI radio so the audio is never going to truly sound HI-FI anyway. I do use a expensive high quality Ribbon mic on my home station and a pro audio wireless mic on my mobile HF radio. The little processing which I do use on my HF radio's goes along way and it is done with each radio's own on board processing tailored for the bandwidth used in HF radio broadcasting.
Again, people I have heard with all kinds of outboard gear are compelled to over-use it and play mad scientist twisting all kinds of knobs and don't realize most of the EQ adjustments will fall out of the other ends receiver's bandwidth filter's anyhow. But as long as it sounds like FM in their headphones or talkback, it's good!
If you are not happy with your Cobra 148 , then get a real HF radio and that will sound far better on SSB than using that Cobra radio and trying to compensate with all kinds of outboard audio gear that was designed and intended for recording studios not radio.