I live about 1/2 of a mile from the harbor and I was thinking of getting a CD Radio to listen in and talk to pilots fishing in the harbor. but I know nothing about CD Radios. Anyone have any suggestions? I'm in a ground floor apartment.
Get a VHF, not a CB. A handheld would be the cheapest option.
Brooklyn: they don't broadcast on Citizen Band (CB). You need a marine radio. Dominick
In the Navy, we use Icom hand helds pretty much exclusivly. They work well and are durable. If you live 1/2 mile from shore in a developed area (I don't know a thing about Brooklyn except I never want to drive their again,) then I strongly recomend an external antenna mounted on a roof top or suction cupped to a window if you are in an apartment. The increased reception range is dramatic. We had a ship to shore installed in the motor home we used at Oceanside after we got rid of the big boat, I used to listen to it for hours while watching the rods from the front seat.
Ron
Frequency and rules. CB is a toy, VHF is a tool/safety item.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_VHF_radio
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CB_radio
Here's a good tutorial on handhelds from West Marine. http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/WestAdvisorView?langId=-1&storeId=11151&page=VHF-Handheld-Radios#.UgUAhj9h8g4 (http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/WestAdvisorView?langId=-1&storeId=11151&page=VHF-Handheld-Radios#.UgUAhj9h8g4)
Down in Baja almost everyone has a base station with antena for their VHF at home, another VHF in the boat and a hand held as backup for the boat and taken when using the ATV's. IMO hand helds are nice but should be used as a backup or in vehicles or places where you cant mount a raido.
If you're really into it and have the money to spend, I agree a base station would be nice. But if you just want to hang out by the dock and listen to the boat chatter a handheld would be a perfect, very inexpensive, choice.
I don't know, Lee. My family has a lot of truck drivers and they certainatly wouldn't consider a CB a toy. Especially if the FCC is looked at as a grey area!
Ron
For most non professional drivers a CB is a toy, I would think your truck driving family members would agree. VHF has a lot more rules but I miss the days when you had to be licensed to use it, hearing CB slang over the VHF makes me want to puke. Last week we had some anus keying the mike over his tape payer and illegally transmitting music on the VHF for 15 minutes.
I agree that VHF is not as friendly a place as it used to be. But believe me, it is no where near as bad as in other parts of the world. The stuff that goes out around Bahrain is about the worst. Their is actually a Philipino in that part of the world with a HUGE base station that will stomp all over 16 with swear words just because. It can make piloting tough.
Ron
The USCG frowns on that and WILL track down someone doing so and make sure they don't do it again. Several "CB talkers" were stepping on other conversations last week too.
The really stupid thing is that the majority of driver's, the one's the CB talkers believe they are emulating, don't talk like that on the CB! Enough do that a truck stop occasionally sounds like Smokie and the Bandit returns, but the vast majority use good old English.
Ron
Quote from: noyb72 on August 10, 2013, 05:26:00 AM
....but the vast majority use good old English.
10-4 good buddy. ;D
No one ever included Lee in the vast majority. :D :D
Ron
Improper use of the radio and not switching channels if you need to have a conversation along with not knowing how to use one in the first place.
you just made me think of a classic.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gI5eT4UmyFY (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gI5eT4UmyFY)
Almost forgot rubberducky.
As someone who didn't know their was something special about a line of trucks because that's just how he grew up, and who learned math by figuring out how to run 3 log books at the same time. I appreciated that.
Ron