Back in the late 60's and early 70's, well before the "good buddy explosion", most CB operators put a lot of time and effort to design their stations with the best antenna and ground systems like a 5/8 wave ground plane and GOOD RG/8U coax. And they also bought the best transceiver and microphone systems as well, like the Lafayette Comstat 25B with a Turner Plus 2 or 3 microphone. All legal. (But of course.... some added a linear to add a little "UMPH" to their signal). The conversations were somewhat reminiscent to some of the AM'ers on 3885 kHz (80 meter ham). CB at that time was not exactly mainstream, yet. Then the "good buddy" stuff happened and overnight practically, everybody had a CB. The band was so congested, the FCC added Channels 24-40 effective on January 1, 1977. Three years later, most of the good buddy stuff faded to obscurity. Today, CB is a vast wasteland with a few holdouts spewing more F-bombs than "Slap Shot".
I still have a CB rig. No, I don't use it for two-way. I use it as a barometer to see if the skip is in. 27.025 MHz (CB Channel 6) is the best channel for that purpose. The alligators down south, those over-modulated, 10,000+ watt one-way broadcasters that you would never understand a word edgewise provide the perfect barometer to see if the skip is in and if it may go into the 10 meter band. Very effective and cheap!
I was on CB from 1969 through 1977. Once the good buddy crap took over what used to be a sensible band of operators, I called it quits and worked on getting my ham ticket. I never looked back. Obviously, 99% of the operators did the same thing and left.
Peter Q. George (K1XRB)
Whitman, Massachusetts
formerly KACG-1233 and KDO-9550
Handle: "Panther One"