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Any CB shops / installers still around in Clark County?
Kelly Poots, 928.246.1457, 3548 N Bruce St. North Las Vegas, NV 89030 , https://www.facebook.com/KellysCbRadio
This guy is amazing.
Get your ham license and a sat communicator. They have served me well offroading around Vegas. 2m/70cm is great and its rare that I cannot call up a repeater out in the sticks (Kenwood DM710GA, 38" mag mount antenna), but the SPOT devices are cheap enough and much more reliable if its an actual emergency.
The offroad community is straight up abusing ham radio at this point, but its on simplex out in the middle of no where so I dont think anyone cares too much. Getting licensed and learning will help you a lot, though. I'd hate to learn how to dial up a FM tone and offset on a repeater in an actual emergency.
So they’re using the ham 2m and 70cm simplex frequencies without a license?The offroad community is straight up abusing ham radio at this point, but its on simplex out in the middle of no where so I dont think anyone cares too much.
Yep, I have beat some of them up over it.So they’re using the ham 2m and 70cm simplex frequencies without a license?
Not sure if they still make them but if they do you could get an all in one unit. Back in the day I had a Galaxy DX88-HL. It had the CB frequencies built into it. I guess that particular radio became illegal due to it being marketed as a CB radio but was actually 10 meter. Don't remember all the specific details surrounding it but an option worth looking into anyway depending on your budget.
http://www.galaxyradios.com/88.html
I've thought seriously about getting a 11/10 meter transceiver like the Galaxy DX88-HL or DX99-V. I like the idea of having that in addition to my Yaesu FT-1D Fusion VHF/UHF. (Also need a truck mounted Fusion transceiver; perhaps the FTM-100.)
Question: Would a Wilson 1000 antenna (tuned to the middle of the 10 and 11 meter freqs) work ok on all 10/11 meter freqs??
Other suitable antenna(s)?
Totally agree, but lot lizzards don't use ham radioI just don't understand the CB with a linear amp idea, spend a helluva lot more money on a radio and a linear Amp for CB than you would on a decent Ham rig and the license to go with it, and end up with a rig that still doesn't have the range and voice/signal clarity of a good Ham Radio.
The10 and 11 meter bands in AM or SSB mode are not a long range proposition, even with a huge amp, unless you are running a large directional beam type antenna, and you just can't mount a Yagi with an approximately 32 foot wide set of elements on your Jeep or 4x4 pickup.
Most CB antennas for a vehicle are only rated for 100 to 150 watts, especially the mag mount type, the 102" whips will handle a little more, but the tiny RG58 coax that feeds them is being taxed with anything more than 100 or so watts input, and so you really are not punching out as much signal as you think, most of it is being converted to heat energy in the coax and the antenna itself even if you manage to get it tuned for a low SWR.
And then there is the legality of it, get caught, and the FCC can issue you a huge fine, they will confiscate the equipment, and can confiscate the vehicle it is mounted in too.
Cheaper to get the Ham license ($15 and the test) and acquire a good all mode radio like a good used Yaesu FT100 (VHF/UHF/HF, works in AM, SSB, FM and CW) and puts out 100 watts as is. If you are going to four wheel it so far back in the wilds you need long distance comms, 11 meters isn't going to get it, hardly anyone listening to it , and if they could hear your booming signal because you are running that 500 or 1,000 or 1,500 watt linear amp (and the dual batteries and 200+ Amp alternator it would require , along with the 2 gauge wire to power it), you wouldn't be able to hear their reply unless they were also running that much power, for while they might hear you from a 100 or 1,000 miles away on their 4 Watt AM 12 Watt SSB CB radio, their signal is never going to reach you.
Put that 100 watt all band rig in the truck, add a good screwdriver HF antenna and a good high gain VHF/
UHF antenna for that side of the radio, and be out the door for hundreds of dollars less than your CB rig with the linear and antenna that are far less efficient. And you have a lot more bands to holler for help on, instead of just 40 channels of AM , 40 channels of USB and 40 of USB , you have literally thousands of frequencies to choose from, and generally speaking, if someone can hear you on one, you can hear them as well.
Yup, just don't understand it, but then I am a dinosaur, and technology corn fuse tuh kates me.

But you don't need a linear amp to work the lot lizards on CB, running bare foot will do it.
But you don't need a linear amp to work the lot lizards on CB, running bare foot will do it.
In a word. NO.So the question(s) remain:
Would a Wilson 1000 antenna (tuned to the middle of the 10 and 11 meter freqs) work ok on all 10/11 meter freqs??
Other suitable antenna(s) for both 10 and 11 meter freqs?
Thanks.In a word. NO.
Not in a mag mount or mobile rig antenna anyway.
The Wilson 1000 is a good CB antenna, but it doesn't have enough range of tuning adjustment to be able to tune to the middle of the 10 meter band (10 meter band runs from 28.300 MHz for voice, up to 29.700 MHz) .
The Wilson comes tuned for the middle of the 11 meter CB band (26.965 MHz to 27.405 MHz ) so it's set for about 27.185 MHZ and has enough tuning range (by extending or shortening the stinger tip) to get it almost down to the bottom of that range, or almost to the top of the range, but not completely down or up, as you want to keep the SWR under 2.0:1 throughout the range of the band.
So it would fall short of being able to make it to the middle of the 10 meter voice band at 29.0 MHz. You could put a longer stinger on it, and get it to tune into the 10 meter band, but then it would not work worth a dang in the 11 meter band.
And while the manufacturer rates it as being able to handle "3,000 watts", I really doubt that it would, the RG58 coax cable on it would melt long before you pumped that much wattage into it.
RG58, if feeding a perfect 1:1 SWR, is good to about 1KW at frequencies below 30 MHz, but as the length goes up,, or the SWR mismatch does, or the frequency does, that power handling capability goes down, and pretty fast.
If you want to run a 10 meter mobile rig, buy a 10 meter mobile mag mount antenna, but to run a rig that will do both 10 and 11 meters (which would be an illegal rig) with just one antenna, you would need either a manual or automatic antenna tuner to make the antenna work with both bands.
Same situation if you ran just one antenna and two radios, a CB and a 10 Meter FM ham rig, you would then need a coax switch and an antenna tuner, the switch to split the antenna's feed between the two radios, and the tuner hooked to whichever radio the antenna was NOT built for.
Best bet there would be tune the antenna manually (by adjusting its physical length) to the middle of the 11 meter CB band, then use the manual or automatic tuner to get it to work on the Ham 10 meter band.
Now for a base station, you could run a SolarCon A99 antenna , $99, plus $60 if you want the optional ground plane kit, which I highly recommend, and of course you will need some coax to get to it as it doesn't come with coax attached.
It is easily tunable between 10 and 11 meters ( you only get to pick one at a time, if you mount it on the roof, you would have to go up there to switch between 10 and 11 meters) but it will handle 2,000 watts, and with a wide range tuner, like a MFJ 993B or SGC 230, it will tune from 6 meters through 160 meters. Great antenna, very sturdy, I have used one for years. Hooked through a coax switch, one side sets it to the CB radio (antenna is tuned for the middle of the CB band) other side puts it to a wide range tuner and on to a Ham HF rig, and the tuner lets it work on bands from 6 meters through 160, we use this very set up in our Nye County Emergency Operations Center Communications Radio Room.