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Keep in mind - only those frequencies in "D" can be transmitted on in the US. These are the Citizen's Band (or C.B.) Radio frequencies. The others are above and below the FCC allotted range for CB. Transmitting on these other frequencies requires an FCC issued license.
You can face fines, imprisonment or both if caught transmitting without the proper license.
hello this could be down to two things either you have a dry solder joint on the board or your board is cracked open top panel and check for dry joints or a crack in the circuit board
goodluck
Hi, my name is John. Try a external speaker, plug it in the back of radio, turn the RF GAIN to MAX. Turn the SQUELCH all the way to left, make sure the select knob is on CB, and on AM...try all this and if that's does not do it, let me know, I will post other steps here,.... hope this was very helpful....
First off you can by any radio parts that you need and any good CB shop knows that.But if its only a little over a year old then you can send it back to factory and it'll be fixed free. There is a serial number on the back of the radio the first to digits is the year and the second two the month it was made so is a year or a little over a year old if so call 1-814-898-1046.
You are connected to a power source that is inadequate, possibly a poor ground in the vehicle or an underrated power supply if using as a base. Oxidized connections on the fuse or fuseholder may also be the cause.
A word of advice, never buy a radio second hand. Used radios are sold for some odd reason, and it may be because it is broken. And yes you can do it with your meter, you just have to tune the radio using Coarse and Fine adjustments, also use peaking if you know how, to get a better transmit and receive.
U mean on sideband? Frequency counter only useful on other than sideband operation. This does not mean the carrier insertion osc. is on frequency. If it needs adjustment, your voice will sound high/ low on transmit. Incoming signals will sound right after adjusting the osc.
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