N3CVJ wrote:
Run, don't walk away from peak jobs.
A most certainly biased opinion. Just because YOU hacked up radios as an
"independant (sic) contractor" and couldn't peak them properly doesn't
mean the rest of the world should discount all the other techs.
They do
nothing more than remove your hard earned
money and put it into someone else's hands.
No wonder you couldn't make it as a tech. There are many reasons to
"peak" radios. In fact, what *you* term "peak" encompasses virtually any
mods or work to a radio, such as removing the cover and aligning or
tuning.
All that is usually involved is peaking the
power output for maximum, and removing or
reducing the affects of the modulation limiter.
Ahhh,,,well, there you have it, mistakenly believing that all techs
"usually" look at peaking a radio in the same incompetent manner as
yourself.
I won't go into the math here but in order to
see even 1 "S" (signal) unit increase on
another guy's meter, your radio would have to
put out 4 times as much power as it did stock.
You would be best served putting your voodoo radio bull**** to rest.
Assuming a peak and tune job is somehow related to increased "S" units
is imbecilic.
It is VERY difficult to get 16 watts of dead key
power from a 4 watt CB.
If one was getting a 16 watt dead key from a cb, it would be just
that,,a 16 watt cb and no longer a 4 watt cb.
It cannot be done by
alignment alone. By the time someone
"redesigns" the transmitter and replaces the
parts necessary to get up to 16 watts, you are
left with a radio that may very well be less
reliable, or may have a dirty or unstable
transmitter.
And you may be left with a radio that works quite well and exhibits none
of the unfavorable qualities (read: glass half empty) of which you
choose to focus.
If you truly want to get a boost in output
power,
you are better off with an amplifier. Yes, an
amplifier is illegal as heck, but so is a peak
job.
A tune isn't necessarily illegal, yet you have maintained "peak" and
"tune" are synonyms by your past posts regarding the opening of radios.
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