nn4p
11-05-2003, 01:48 AM
When I used to operate my Cobra Citizen's Band Ultra-Deluxe Base Station Rig, I became increasingly irritated within a matter of minutes as I simply could not make those long-range DX contacts at all. Some 16 years prior, I feverishly spent 600 dollars on this highly touted Ultra-Deluxe model Citizen’s Band transceiver after a good deal of looking around at my first Hamvention held in a barn-fashioned building just outside Grandforks, North Dakota. After all, I felt my first Amateur Citizen’s Band Radio should be the type transceiver that a novice to the world of worldwide communications be allowed to grow into as my skills and aptitudes improved. As an aside, I neglected to purchase the coaxial cable while in bucolic Grandforks, and stopped by a conveniently located Radio Shack and bought their very best thin black cabling. I know what the reader is likely thinking and I must agree that the Hamvention in Grandforks, N.D. was and remains obviously somewhat smaller and thus, hardly what the Dayton Hamvention reportedly is. However, I was a bit more naïve in those days and lacked the purchasing savvy, good judgment and common sense that one acquires with experience.
After 15 years of nightly attempts to make DX contacts on each and every one of the 40 channels afforded me while using the Cobra Ultra-Deluxe CB Radio, I finally and fully became a wildly loose cannon. It occurred to me that irrespective of the quality of coaxial cable I used, that my reasoned experiential data of, at that time, 15 years proved irrefutably that it was time to employ my D-104 battery driven dynamic microphone in a more cathartic, therapeutically resourceful manner in opposition to the Cobra CB Amateur Radio. While ferocious and recalcitrant behaviors have never been my bailiwick or inclination, within a matter of seconds I felt my persistently growing lunacy, driven by 15 years of frustration, begin to rue its ugly head. With my D-104 in hand and the Ultra-Deluxe CB Amateur Radio delicately positioned on my workbench (with unbridled passion), I delightfully proceeded to pummel the once proud Cobra into a hideous heap of almost disturbing ruin. http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/biggrin.gif http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/mad.gif
Needless to say, the next day I removed my father’s dusty but always dutiful Icom Amateur Radio from the guestroom closet -- placing it in the exact spot where the Ultra-Deluxe CB once, and in retrospect, simply served as nothing more than a rather large power consuming paper weight. Although I didn’t find the Icom Radio as aesthetically appealing as the once austere Cobra Ultra-Deluxe, I was impressed with the foresight of the Icom engineers by including the advanced feature of being able to tune into the restricted 40 channel Citizen’s Band frequencies especially allocated to only U.S. Citizens or reciprocating foreign pontificators. As an aside, my father was an avid reader and hence, I learned most of my extensive Amateur CD Radio knowledge from listening to him as he forced my kid brother and me to become well-read and current on all of the latest technical advances.
As a historical bit of trivia, the FCC would eventually reduce the standards of Amateur Citizen’s Band Operations by allowing anyone who could pass some test to enter into the world of both Amateur and Citizen’s Band radio. To the extent I was a rather seasoned operator, no one ever asked me to take the test as I feel certain that the FCC officials knew that a beginner’s exam was clearly beneath my technical wherewithal and proven proficiencies.
At any rate, please pardon the momentary subject change that’s subject to change as the reader perhaps has already discerned. Within two hours of tenacious ALL-BAND amateur radio antenna assembly, the faithful Icom powered up and performed flawlessly as I worked all continents within the time constraints of that very same day. Each operator I talked to on that memorable day invariably asked for my assigned call sign. As frustrating as it was, I knew that they were unaware of my previous Citizen’s Band experience and thus, no remedial call sign was required of me. Those guys sure were a determined bunch, as I bet each of them asked me what my QTH was a dozen times per each contact. Of course anyone with any sense and that could pick up on my ease and verve as I fluently spoke, surely wouldn’t have asked about my Qualifying Technical Heritage (QTH) I had been granted by virtue of my father’s glory days as an Amateur Citizen Operator.
Back to the topic at hand however, I have found that the same Tandy Corporation coax that for 15 years had unwittingly never been attached to the Citizen's Band Radio, for whatever reason, now seems to work extremely well with my Citizen’s Band Icom Frequency Allocated Amateur Radio.
To make a long story even painfully longer, I can only posit what this author’s professional yet amateur radio related opinion and advice would be to the perplexed reader in search of the best coax for his given situation. Succinctly and without question, the RG-58 A/U is the best choice notwithstanding one capriciously decides in favor of the purchase of RG-8/X which is also the best choice based purely on factual consistencies in both types of coax and too, a unconscionable degree of conjecture. But, in due course the assessment must be made by the individual who will be making the informed choice. If after all of this data, the temporarily confounded coaxial cable consumer still finds it difficult in making a choice, I'd just take a leap of faith and purchase a mom-sized roll of the thin black coax that can be purchased at the nearest Radio Shack; kith and kin to the Tandy Corporation's coaxial cable. Either way, you really can't lose as Tandy's coax is tantamount to the Radio Shack brand. The word “Tandy” has always unnerved me, and I sure wish the marketing team would consider changing the Corporation’s name. Anyway, I'm reasonably certain that the Tandy coax is of lesser quality than RG-58 A/U, but possibly better than RG-8/X which is comparable to the thin black coax, again, found at your local Radio Shack dealer. I hope my knowledge has proven helpful as the search continues for both coaxial cabling and Amateur CB Radio generalities in general. What?
Best wishes and perhaps I’ll catch you on the flip-flop as when mobile, I generally hang out on frequency 19. Hopefully most readers are up to speed with their King’s English while operating on the advanced Citizen’s Band frequencies. Channel 19 has always been a favorite of mine for some reason!
Take care,
Ned and the First Reader
After 15 years of nightly attempts to make DX contacts on each and every one of the 40 channels afforded me while using the Cobra Ultra-Deluxe CB Radio, I finally and fully became a wildly loose cannon. It occurred to me that irrespective of the quality of coaxial cable I used, that my reasoned experiential data of, at that time, 15 years proved irrefutably that it was time to employ my D-104 battery driven dynamic microphone in a more cathartic, therapeutically resourceful manner in opposition to the Cobra CB Amateur Radio. While ferocious and recalcitrant behaviors have never been my bailiwick or inclination, within a matter of seconds I felt my persistently growing lunacy, driven by 15 years of frustration, begin to rue its ugly head. With my D-104 in hand and the Ultra-Deluxe CB Amateur Radio delicately positioned on my workbench (with unbridled passion), I delightfully proceeded to pummel the once proud Cobra into a hideous heap of almost disturbing ruin. http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/biggrin.gif http://www.qrz.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/mad.gif
Needless to say, the next day I removed my father’s dusty but always dutiful Icom Amateur Radio from the guestroom closet -- placing it in the exact spot where the Ultra-Deluxe CB once, and in retrospect, simply served as nothing more than a rather large power consuming paper weight. Although I didn’t find the Icom Radio as aesthetically appealing as the once austere Cobra Ultra-Deluxe, I was impressed with the foresight of the Icom engineers by including the advanced feature of being able to tune into the restricted 40 channel Citizen’s Band frequencies especially allocated to only U.S. Citizens or reciprocating foreign pontificators. As an aside, my father was an avid reader and hence, I learned most of my extensive Amateur CD Radio knowledge from listening to him as he forced my kid brother and me to become well-read and current on all of the latest technical advances.
As a historical bit of trivia, the FCC would eventually reduce the standards of Amateur Citizen’s Band Operations by allowing anyone who could pass some test to enter into the world of both Amateur and Citizen’s Band radio. To the extent I was a rather seasoned operator, no one ever asked me to take the test as I feel certain that the FCC officials knew that a beginner’s exam was clearly beneath my technical wherewithal and proven proficiencies.
At any rate, please pardon the momentary subject change that’s subject to change as the reader perhaps has already discerned. Within two hours of tenacious ALL-BAND amateur radio antenna assembly, the faithful Icom powered up and performed flawlessly as I worked all continents within the time constraints of that very same day. Each operator I talked to on that memorable day invariably asked for my assigned call sign. As frustrating as it was, I knew that they were unaware of my previous Citizen’s Band experience and thus, no remedial call sign was required of me. Those guys sure were a determined bunch, as I bet each of them asked me what my QTH was a dozen times per each contact. Of course anyone with any sense and that could pick up on my ease and verve as I fluently spoke, surely wouldn’t have asked about my Qualifying Technical Heritage (QTH) I had been granted by virtue of my father’s glory days as an Amateur Citizen Operator.
Back to the topic at hand however, I have found that the same Tandy Corporation coax that for 15 years had unwittingly never been attached to the Citizen's Band Radio, for whatever reason, now seems to work extremely well with my Citizen’s Band Icom Frequency Allocated Amateur Radio.
To make a long story even painfully longer, I can only posit what this author’s professional yet amateur radio related opinion and advice would be to the perplexed reader in search of the best coax for his given situation. Succinctly and without question, the RG-58 A/U is the best choice notwithstanding one capriciously decides in favor of the purchase of RG-8/X which is also the best choice based purely on factual consistencies in both types of coax and too, a unconscionable degree of conjecture. But, in due course the assessment must be made by the individual who will be making the informed choice. If after all of this data, the temporarily confounded coaxial cable consumer still finds it difficult in making a choice, I'd just take a leap of faith and purchase a mom-sized roll of the thin black coax that can be purchased at the nearest Radio Shack; kith and kin to the Tandy Corporation's coaxial cable. Either way, you really can't lose as Tandy's coax is tantamount to the Radio Shack brand. The word “Tandy” has always unnerved me, and I sure wish the marketing team would consider changing the Corporation’s name. Anyway, I'm reasonably certain that the Tandy coax is of lesser quality than RG-58 A/U, but possibly better than RG-8/X which is comparable to the thin black coax, again, found at your local Radio Shack dealer. I hope my knowledge has proven helpful as the search continues for both coaxial cabling and Amateur CB Radio generalities in general. What?
Best wishes and perhaps I’ll catch you on the flip-flop as when mobile, I generally hang out on frequency 19. Hopefully most readers are up to speed with their King’s English while operating on the advanced Citizen’s Band frequencies. Channel 19 has always been a favorite of mine for some reason!
Take care,
Ned and the First Reader