Before the days of "that's a BIG 10-4 good-buddy", CB radio was pretty much frequented by pre-ham "wannabees" who had some technical knowledge about the radio they're using and the antenna system they needed to get that signal "out there". Back in the day, there were only 23 channels (not including the R/C channels affectionately known as 3A, 7A, 11A, 15A and 19A and the "business band" channels of 22A and 22B). The favorite radio at the time (around 1970) was the Lafayette Comstat-25B. This was the Cadillac of CB radio. You could do MANY things with a Comstat 25B. Some legal, some not so legal. The Comstat 25B was rated at the maximum output legal power of 3.5 watts. But then again, it was over built to "withstand" an output power of 25+ watts and then some (with some little "changes"). The conversations on 11 meters (pre-1976) sounded somewhat like the AM folks on 3885 kHz. It was a different time indeed. I used to hang around 27.125 MHz (Channel 14) for years from 1967-1977. When "everybody and his mother" had a set and used that insidious "CB Jargon" and the "10 codes" from 1975-on, that was the time when I said "this is where I get off". For the next five years, the CB band was cluttered with "good buddies" and "that's big 10-4 good buddy, come on back...." . Today, the CB band is totally quiet, except when the "skip" fires up on Channel 6 with the mega-powered boots with 10,000+ watts come on and splatter the band, many channels down.
I operated "barefoot" (legal 3.5 watts) with an old Hallicrafters 6 channel rig from 1974-1977, and then with a 23 channel GE rig for another half a year or so. It was fun to be on the band during the pre-"good buddy" days. How times have changed. It's hard to believe that I left the band over 30 years ago. CB radio was the precursor to today's IM'ing and the Internet. I can't get over the similarities to the days I used CB radio and how the way my two kids use the Internet and text messaging today. My kids have no inkling of how we used "wireless" to talk to our friends around town and beyond when we were kids. In Randolph, MA and in nearby Holbrook, MA., there were many CB operators in the early 1970's who now are long-time ham operators (myself included). I was KDO-9550 (later KACG-1233), "Panther 1" . I wonder how many more of us former CB'ers have some fond memories of the "old days" of CB Radio? Any takers? 73.
Peter Q. George (K1XRB)
Whitman, Massachusetts
I operated "barefoot" (legal 3.5 watts) with an old Hallicrafters 6 channel rig from 1974-1977, and then with a 23 channel GE rig for another half a year or so. It was fun to be on the band during the pre-"good buddy" days. How times have changed. It's hard to believe that I left the band over 30 years ago. CB radio was the precursor to today's IM'ing and the Internet. I can't get over the similarities to the days I used CB radio and how the way my two kids use the Internet and text messaging today. My kids have no inkling of how we used "wireless" to talk to our friends around town and beyond when we were kids. In Randolph, MA and in nearby Holbrook, MA., there were many CB operators in the early 1970's who now are long-time ham operators (myself included). I was KDO-9550 (later KACG-1233), "Panther 1" . I wonder how many more of us former CB'ers have some fond memories of the "old days" of CB Radio? Any takers? 73.
Peter Q. George (K1XRB)
Whitman, Massachusetts