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On May 18, 7:32 am, bpnjensen wrote:
On May 18, 5:57 am, David wrote: On 17 May 2007 07:44:43 -0700, bpnjensen wrote: On May 16, 4:35 pm, D Peter Maus wrote: Get a decent converation going, and you'll be surprised at how many will participate. Yeah :-) Your mileage will vary, of course, but if you know how to apply it, a decent CB rig can indeed be a lot of fun. Peter, in your opinion, what would constitute a decent rig? I don't have on just now, but In the old days, I always used off-the-shelf Cobras and Pearce-Simpsons, usually with a (TUG8) D104 mike attached, even while I lusted after Trams and Brownings. They always worked well for me, but then what did I know? Base antennas were, variously, 1/4 wave GPs, a HyGain Penetrator (super antenna!) and a Wilson 6- element beam (amazing antenna). Mobile antennas were either 1/4-wave whips or HyGain "rabbit ears" on the gutters - also great antennas. Bruce Jensen The 102'' whip is 5/8 wave.- David - check your math. CB is 11 meters = ~ 433 inches. Take that whip, mount it on a 6" ball & spring, and you get 1/4 wavelength. (5/8 wave is up around 22' 4" - check out a typical 5/8 wave ground plane, like a Penetrator or one of the old Avanti Sigma 5/8 (another great antenna)). Now, what the vehicle, acting as a ground plane, gives you, is anyone's guess - but the radiator is 0.25 wave. I would not want a 22' whip swinging off my rear bumper! Bruce Jensen- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - BpnJ - "CB is 11 meters = ~ 433 inches. Take that whip, mount it on a 6" ball & spring, and you get 1/4 wavelength." Wow ! - Very Logical and Understandable ~ RHF -wrt- The 102'' CB Whip Antenna |