Thread: CB slang
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Old September 6th 13, 07:27 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.cb,rec.radio.scanner,alt.radio.family,uk.rec.radio.cb
Rev. Don Kool Rev. Don Kool is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2013
Posts: 4
Default CB slang

On 9/6/2013 4:32 AM, Brown Sugar wrote:
On 05/09/2013 22:29, Rev. Don Kool wrote:
On 9/5/2013 4:56 PM, Brown Sugar wrote:
On 05/09/2013 07:07, Rev. Don Kool wrote:
On 9/4/2013 4:11 AM, Brown Sugar wrote:
On 02/09/2013 21:07, HankG wrote:
"Brown Sugar" wrote in message
...
On 30/07/2011 03:39, radio rambo wrote:
"Barry OGrady" wrote in message
...
QSY, QSL?


10-4, asshat.


Qsy: Change Frequency.
Qsl: Confirm, acknowledge, or confirmed.


--

Those terms were in use by Hams, long before CB was alive. You also
hear
73(s) a lot.

HG


They are q-codes. designed as morse abbreviations by the ham radio
community. Most of cb terminology is derivitive of ham.

Do you have HF privileges?

Every licensee here does have them. What about in your country?

Technicially they all do, but the Technician license only has a small
allocation on 10 meters with limited power.

Can you operate on 20 or 40 meters? If the God of propagation allows it,
maybe we can try a QSO sometime. I have an AA3** call sign.


I have 10 meters and am constructing a loop for 80. I had a whip that
gave me 20 but I only heard the states once and that was long path.My
location does not afford me space for a decent antenna system, however I
occasionally visit the local clubs and i've worked stateside from one of
them. Have you tried the iirlp nodes? I was playing with those for a
bit. Not really my cup of tea but useful in difficult situations.


I'm fortunate that I have a large lot with tall trees. I use a 265 ft
Carolina Windom (dipole variant) up about 80 feet for the lower part of
HF. UK/europe is usually an easy catch. As often as not, I don't even
bother with the amp.

About 10 years ago, my club had an IRLP node. After a couple of years,
people lost interest in it. Many grumbled that it wasn't 'real radio'.
Two meters/70 cm is now nearly dead in this area.

I can work europe on 80 meters, I just do better on 40 or 20 meters.

I've seen people make a dipole out of 2 20 meter monoband mobile whips
and do OK.

What kind of transceiver do you use?


--
Try God!
Don