HFU HF Underground

General Category => General Radio Discussion => Topic started by: ChrisSmolinski on December 20, 2023, 1503 UTC

Title: The Rise and Decline of CB Radio
Post by: ChrisSmolinski on December 20, 2023, 1503 UTC
In the mid-1970s, an obscure technology called Citizens Band or CB radio exploded in popularity across America. Seemingly overnight, bulky CB radios became standard equipment in millions of cars and trucks across the country. Antennas sprouted up like the shoots of some weird new plants. Obscure codes and nicknames like “10-4 good buddy” entered the national lexicon. But by the early 1980s, the CB craze had largely faded away. What explains this rapid rise and fall of what was arguably one of the biggest fads in American history?

Full story: https://sjl.us/2023/11/12/the-rise-and-decline-of-cb-radio/
Title: Re: The Rise and Decline of CB Radio
Post by: East Troy Don on December 21, 2023, 0146 UTC
Inexpensive radios, no licensing and unenforceable rules.   Geez, what could possibly go wrong?   :D
Title: Re: The Rise and Decline of CB Radio? Depends, where you are.
Post by: ThaDood on December 21, 2023, 2040 UTC
I've always thought that MAX distance rule was stupid. When you put a Citizen's Band in an HF portion, that gets more openings than the neighboring 10M Amateur Band, what did they think was going to happen? Still, CB has its place. Want to go deep into wooded areas, with hills & valleys, VHF MURS, and especially UHF FRS / GMRS, just have no penetration. Let alone, 800MHz cell phone.   
Title: Re: The Rise and Decline of CB Radio
Post by: Shortwave_Listener on December 21, 2023, 2144 UTC
At least they got rid of the distance rule in the US. We still have it here.
Title: Re: The Rise and Decline of CB Radio
Post by: RobRich on December 21, 2023, 2152 UTC
FWIW, the FCC finally dropped the 250km limit in 2017.

https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-344617A1.pdf

I agree the distance limit never really made sense for a HF band. Sure, break out a map each time ya' make a contact. Even just 12w SSB legal limit on a decent 11m opening can garner contacts at thousands of miles distance.

I used to "talk" on 27.025am and similar at times back in the day, but being realistic, power like that is rarely needed to actually work 11m DX.
Title: Re: The Rise and Decline of CB Radio
Post by: shadypyro on December 23, 2023, 0407 UTC
And channel 9 isn’t a emergency channel anymore, now a calling channel in Spanish with lots of power and the echo microphones, channel 19 is pretty much the cousin of Channel 6
Title: Re: The Rise and Decline of CB Radio
Post by: RobRich on December 23, 2023, 0429 UTC
Sure enough. 27.065a (ch9) has been mostly Spanish-language DX here in the SE USA since even my CB days back in the 1990s

27.185a (ch19) ranges from truckers, to truckers talking DX, to often just outright trolling via both locals and DX here.

A few local regulars still popup in the SDR waterfall here. Seems mostly mornings on the same two or three frequencies.

I rarely turn on a CB anymore, but if I was so inclined, I tend to prefer DX via the usual SSB frequencies. That said, I know, even 27.385l (ch38) can turn into QRM and trolling real quick.