If it's quiet(relatively-the background noise level) turn the squelch off (counter-clockwise). You may have a "RF gain" setting, that needs to be fully on. It's an attenuater for when you have lots of big signals around. Don't confuse this with "AF gain" which is the same as volume.
102" whip on the bumper, cheap, retro, very effective.
You see 102" is 1/4 wave on 27mHz. 1/4 wave is a relatively short antenna, but impedance matches to 50 ohms (standard coax) very easily. All those CB antennas you see shorter than 102" are "loaded" antennas. The load is either windings on fiberglass (firestik type) or a loading coil (wilson type). What do these loads or windings do? They make the antenna look like a 102" 1/4 wave radiator to the radio signal.
So cut to the chase and hang a big whip out there.
When you see hams with big coils out there, don't think that I've led you astray. A quarter wave for 40 meters would be--guessed it yet? 10 meters. That'd be a 30+ foot antenna. And we have "bigger" bands that that.
So we have to compromise, ya'll don't--take advantage of it.
102" whip on the bumper, cheap, retro, very effective.
You see 102" is 1/4 wave on 27mHz. 1/4 wave is a relatively short antenna, but impedance matches to 50 ohms (standard coax) very easily. All those CB antennas you see shorter than 102" are "loaded" antennas. The load is either windings on fiberglass (firestik type) or a loading coil (wilson type). What do these loads or windings do? They make the antenna look like a 102" 1/4 wave radiator to the radio signal.
So cut to the chase and hang a big whip out there.
When you see hams with big coils out there, don't think that I've led you astray. A quarter wave for 40 meters would be--guessed it yet? 10 meters. That'd be a 30+ foot antenna. And we have "bigger" bands that that.
So we have to compromise, ya'll don't--take advantage of it.
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