I know every one of my subscribers will understand my love and theory for this topic.. There are still tons of people that know nothing about ham radio, but they have an interest in CB radio (11 meters). Encourage them to come here, teach them something don't bash them about CB radio.......Encourage them to continue in CB radio and when they walk through this 3 day convention they will have a very CLEAR perspective of what ham radio is all about. Sometimes, It takes one of us to invite a CB enthusiast to a hamfest to avoid the fear of going or lack of knowledge....CB is The gateway drug into this hobby. There is enough material on UA-cam about all the new products and vendors.. Let's drive some interest into the tailgate section to get someone started...
Never heard of the ham-fest in Orlando ?? Is it annual ? Thanks for posting , I’ve had my ticket for 7 years now, but I’m still a CB enthusiast as well . I will check out more videos on your channel 👌
Read my post below. I started there (CB) and I am now where I wanted to be back then. You either have the radio lust or you don't. Encourage ANY young person to get 'The Knack" (hahah) for radio. There's no better sense of achievement than talking to someone off a homemade Quad than some stupid internet channel.
Howdy to Scott and George! I might go double or nothing they'll be an 11 meter antenna among the antenna farm on the truck that never will see an antenna. lol
690 R my first ham radio . Worked the world on 2.5 watts back in 1992 . Later added a 25 watt linear, even better . Now it seems the bare minimum is 100 watts. Love 6m.
Grew up with an interest in electronics, installed a CB radio in my Jeep when I was 26, heard them shooting skip and immediately wondered what was out there beyond the little bit of RF I was listening to. Here we are 8 years later, working on my General!
I love the old days ham,cb,old cars it's nice to reflect on , because you we were younger and mind flood's with who was there the car you had ect.just awesome. Tnx Eric another great video that people will watch over over and rember to some these day's are their good old ! Be cool and respect their time ,your action today is your memories of tomarow see be careful and collected good shit in you're head
I have a D104 mic collection, now they are just trophies. also had a few old tube radios in my day. Thanks for the video i enjoy seeing the old radios.
I may be a ham but CB radios, especially Browning eagles have a huge soft apot for me. The Best friends ive made where on CB and I enjoy it more than HAM but I do both regularly. I was there for this years hamcation and came home with a few scanners and a motorola UHF HT1000 complete kit!
Don't forget the Ultra Great STONER CB's remember they had the outboard accessory which allowed you to have AM? Anyone also remember the C.P.I. Luxury line of CB'S?
I have an old RCI base station in my garage that I hop on to talk with truckers. Killer radio my grandpa has. He got me into CB now I want to get into HAM
I had CB radios in my vehicles back in the 70's. My friend was a radio man in the Air Force and has the knowledge needed to make our CB stations work properly. He also knows that certain conditions, like being near a lake or having snow on the ground improves transmission signals. We now have stations six miles apart that work very well during the day and at night. Antenna height makes a big difference in transmissions. His antenna is 45 feet high and mine is 54 feet high. Every night, about 10:30 p.m., we talk on channel 32 and often talk with other CB stations thirty miles away. I'm glad I got back into using CB radios.
great finds,.. the D104 is a great mike,as u well know, . i used to have one, in my cb days,.. really miss that one,.. looking forward to all the upcoming vids with yr newly aquired boat anchors... all the best from A9
I am glad that you went to the Orlando Ham Fest I really appreciate it. Because I really wanted to go but didn't have the funds. Maybe next year hopefully I will get to meet you and all the other guys I like to watch here on UA-cam. And by the way that D-104 brings back memories of when I was a young man back in my 11 meter days. Anyway I am glad that you had a good time and by you going I was able to see what I missed. 73 AE4OY WILLIAM EM-81UF (OLDYELLA) SOUTH East Georgia
The meter on that Browning wasn't stuck. That meter swung backwards. Look at it again. I have two of them, the 23 channel version and the later 40 channel one.. Both have the backwards swing meters. I'm an Extra class, and still enjoy my collection of old CB radios. The Brownings, Trams Titan 1 thru 4 and the D201 and 201A, the Lafeyette Telsat, the Siltronix/Swans, the SBE Trinidad and several more. Now that I'm retired I've collected all the high price CB base units I couldn't afford when I was 20. An old man and his toys! 73, KO4AXN
Hey! Just thought I’d mention. That solar panel plug in available at auto parts stores, sold for trickle chargers, and you can get it with a pos an neg loop connector. Hope it helps!
I have had a few of the silver eagle chicken chokers, I still have a head to one. Bad thing about the vintage radios is a lot of times you have to go through and replace a lot of the electrolytics in them as they have dried out and are bad, or close to it. Looks like you had a awesome time . I had my start in the forbidden band myself and have a wolverine number but can't remember it. I probably have it written down somewhere. Longest contact I made on 11 meters was a gentleman in Naples Italy one summer morning. 73
Wished the ham Radio Rally's were like that in the UK. Its very difficult to find used equipment like that (a) in good working order, and (b) at bargain price.
I remember keying my D104 at the speaker of my old Radio Shack Navaho base and backing it off slowly. Made a similar Eagle noise. Oh God... Now I'm remembering a local fellow who had legit Eagles with a Laser 500 antenna on a 50ft tower. He OWNED this area. Add to that his 1kW amp and when he keyed you might as well go cut the grass or wash the car. His front to back ratio was such that when he keyed opposite of the rest of us locals, we could barely hear him. Laser 500's were the s' back in the day.
@@bigpoppa6998 are you into the hobby? If not, what can we do to help you along? Would you like radio references or a link to a local VE testing location? I think everyone here is to help.
Eli Wilson I appreciate it but I just was scrolling on UA-cam and this popped up. I really don’t have a place to put Radio an Neighbor way to close. But thank you very much for your offer.
@@eliwilson3714 I had a Navaho Pro Niner back in the day. I'm sure I still got it somewhere along with a Pierce Simpson Bengal SSB, a Pace 2300, and I'm sure my D104 lollipop. It might be time to start digging!
Bob Heil says the thing on the bottom of the D104 is actually an electronic impedance changer from the 50,000 ohm crystal mic to something more usable around 1K.
I have an old ht1200 vhf handy for 2 meters, planning to use it for qrp dx later this summer. Might prove interesting because of the super long telescoping whip it has on it lol, what’s cool is it also has a hand mic, it’s a brick otherwise. None of my radios require tubes though.
Had a couple different mark 3's one I put a Siltronics 90 vfo on it plugged in to the channel 9 crystal socket . That allowed it to transmit on everything above 23 that the receiver could get great old radios .
Anybody remember the great POLY COM Radios? We had the top of the line the poly com PRO. Prior to that one of my brothers had an AIR CASTLE CB. Remember that one?
I've still got a maco 300 timestamp 3:15 Nice loud amp! Great video! Also don't cheat yourself out of actually using the D-104 they are great mics! You might want to pop the face off and see if it's got the original mic pickup in the head of it. Cheers man!
Hi Eric, thank you so much for making this video, the old Browning station brought back some good memories from my first years discovering radio. Like most of us, I started with CB and those discovery years were the best. The only problem with used radios at hamfest is that you may end up with stuff you really don’t need just because it got you a bit emotional, hihi. Keep up the good work. 73 Pascal VA2PV
I have been going to Ham Fests in South Texas since 2003. There is always a HUGE amount of CB gear and there are ALWAYS a bunch of Mexican National Truck Drivers. They will buy ANYTHING with a heat sink on it.
The Browning's meter is not stuck! They are made that way. When powered up, it "falls" back to 0. I previously owned one and the Astatic Golden Eagle D104.
WOW, its been years, the Browning ping. When I had my Comms store/repair I was the Browning and Tram authorized service center. The sound of the tubes was the big thing back when. I need to hit a fest, its been 30-35 years. I think it was around 82-83 was my last fest and field day. WOW. The Yaesu 101, 902, were the hot numbers. Memories for sure
there's one CB that i would love to get back... my old cobra 29-gtl-dx looks like the classic, but had 10m all the way up thru the eu cb frequencies (I was in the UK at the time and theirs were different to the EU)
Feed back during the transition from receive to transmit, causes the Browning eagle "ping". It was initially unintended but became famous. At least that's was what I was told.
The capacitor actually caused feedback. While the ping was active, and you moved the microphone around the radio, you could change the pitch. You could do the mod to the Mark 2 and mark 3, but I don't think you could do it to the Mark 4.
And if you have the squelch up the radio won't ping when you key it. Mark 2 and 3 receivers have a reverse AGC and the meter will normally rest at top scale with power off.
I think just about every hamfest i've been to has some type of CB stuff there. Something for everybody. I'd still have an 11 setup if anybody was still on it here. The flea market section is my favorite and where i dump all my money and go home with none and a carload of stuff i probably don't need.
Fantastic video! I would leave that hamfest broke (we don't have them that awesome here in Australia). FYI the FT690R is a great radio - Internal battery power, telescopic whip and SSB. It's actually worth a LOT more than $40!
Hi Eric, Love this video, Almost would want to come up from Australia for Hamcation, So much unbelievable gear, some much history, I can read your passion, well done Peter VK3TQ / VK2LD
I really liked the military solar panel , was that expensive? Great thing to have on field day or camping trips and since it is military grade it will hold up under adverse conditions.
Nice Galaxy 550...one of the radios in QST that I used to dream about getting...they were more on the budget end and more in my reach....with Collins on the Luxury end with no possibility of ever owning. Hope you can get it back on the air sometime.
Dad had a Golden Eagle in the early '70s. The ping you hear when the mike was keyed was intentional. You were on top of the world if you had one. The counterpart to the Golden Eagle called a Demco Super Satellite. We had one of those too and when toy keyed the mike on that one, it sounded like someone dropped a ping pong ball when you transmitted. Love the Comstat 35 and the D-104 lollypop mike you showed early on in your video. Had 'em both when I was in my 20s and loved 'em both. Even though they were the same radio inside, the Comstat 35 was direct competition for the Robyn T-123B, aka the egg cooker. So named because of the HUGE amount of heat generated by the tubes inside it while the set was up and running. With the range boost on the Comstat 35, and the D-104 mike, it was indeed possible for you to overmodulate and sound very distorted to those who were listening to you. There was no was no way that you could use the range boost and crank up the modulation on the D-104 and use them together to boost your output . You could only use one or the other to boost your signal strength. Hope you enjoy your new Golden Eagle, we certainly did!
John here I had the Silronix 1011D with a non peer D-104 loved it my dad had Swan 500 and 1100 watts Swam linar we talked all the time at that time phone calls long distance calling so we used the radio.s
OH MAN!!! You were that close to the Eagles!!! NO GUTS NO GLORY!!! I just knew you were gonna drop that tailgate and we'd hear the PEYAN AN AN AN NGGGG of that Browning keying up! Oh such fond memories of that old radio and a local guy on "Super Bowl 6" that had one, along with a "foot warmer" of course... if you were in a thousand or two yards from him, you knew when he was on the "6" and you were on the opposite end of the 11m band, you'd hear that unique Eagle sound!!!
There used to be a CBer in Montgomery, Alabama with Browning Golden Eagles, an Amp, and Moonrakers beams up a tower. He owned the airwaves. His audio was great and the eagles had their scream. His CB call was Ronald McDonald.
I miss them old CB radios. I too had a Golden Eagle. Wish I never sold mines. Watching this video makes me want to get back into it. "Do I need it?" No! " Do I want it?" Yes! LoL! Did you end up buying the Golden Eagle Radio? Look forward to more of these videos.
Back in the late 70's and 80's CB amplifiers and import radios were a "back room" transaction. You had to know someone who knew someone and they were never on display. Of course that was when the FCC was still doing their job on 11 meters.
My first CB radio was a Sonic 23 channel mobile radio that had the microphone hard wired in. I used to tune my shortwave radio to the same frequency and key the microphone while moving it close then away from the speaker to get feedback to make everyone think I had a Browning. Good memories of those days. Most of the radios I owned were Cobra. The first antenna I had mounted outside was the Starduster. I think it was made by Antenna Specialists. Like you said, CB is the gateway drug.
I bought my Antenna Specialists "Starduster" at a Lafayette Radio store in 1976 , in Salem Oregon. It had a DB gain of 5.0. It cost $45 great Antenna. People told me that it would bleed over several channels though. I also bought a 23 channel Lafayette HB-525F radio, it cost $179. I bought the PS-44 power supply so it could be used as a base station, that was $45. The radio would mount to it as a mated unit. I also got the HB-506A portable battery case that would also mount to the back of the radio using the threaded thumb wheels that you would use to mount it in a vehicle to the mounting bracket. It took 10 "C" size NI-CAD batteries that were recharged by plugging in the back of the power supply in a special socket.It had a very long telescopic whip Antenna, a battery meter, and a shoulder harness wit a pad on it. That was $32. It was heavy because everything was made of steel, no plastic except the channel selector with the numbers on it. That was one powerful walkie-talkie. I had to replace the Antenna 3 times because I broke it off getting it snagged on things. $8 each time. I bought a 50' push up pole, $50, 100' of RG-8U Coax w/PL-259 connectors soldered on, $50. I finally bought a Turner +2 desk Mic ,with the connector soldered on, $45. I already had the guy wires, and the eye screws. Lafayette Radio did all the soldering for me in their store. What a fantastic store that was. They even had other name brand products in there. That was my first real CB setup. I was 17 years old, and had a summer job working for the Parks & Recreation in Salem Oregon. No sales tax in Oregon. I had that radio until Nov of 2000 . I would've still had it if my house wouldn't have burned down. Oh well, I'm alive. Those prices weren't too bad back then for high quality electronics, and their accessories. 73's everyone 🙂🙂
Only things I remember about the Browning golden eagles is the transmit key up racket (thought it was mildly annoying, not so much that I recall complaining to anyone) and they were on the expensive side.
People did that deliberately. I own a stock Mark 3 with an unamplified D104 and unless the squelch is off and the mike next to the speaker it doesn't ping. People *wanted* everyone to know that they were on a Browning.
Didn't snag the Mark 3? Gotta watch those Siltronix rigs; they tend to multiply like rabbits! I started with a C, now have that and two early D models. Much has been written about these drifting. If you work the frequency setting variable caps on the VFO once in a while it will clean off the silver oxide that contributes massively to the drift! They make good contest radios with a wide 4 kHz filter, relative immunity to SWR below 3:1, and 50 to 75 watts out from the 8950. I use a Swan external speaker for a little better audio.
Dude love the videos,I live I a apartment and I can’t put a antenna on the roof,I’m gets Bearcat 980 on Wednesday,I have a k30 antenna,my question is can I put that k30 on a air conditioner and use the top metal of the air conditioner as the ground plain because it’s metal??Thanks John.😎😎😎😎😎😎
Wow, I can remember my Moonraker on a 75’ crank up tower at my house. Was using a Yaesu with a 2000 watt amplifier. I probably had every kind of radio sold to try including all the ham units. In my car I had a Browning LTD that had well over a100 channels with a Palomar 200 watt amp. I was the king of the hill back in those days. I used to sell CB’s back then and a lot of NY State trooper had CB’s sold by me. I still have a Browning LTD in my motorhome with a 100 watt Palomar amp. No fun anymore. When the skip used to come in I would talk to just about every state and country there is. My dad had a General license at the time and I would get all kinds of flack from him.
Admittedly, I lean towards being a radio voyeur. I'd usually rather listen than talk. So I've got the radios.. and 2 scanners going most of the time. But every now and then I get the itch to add a CB to the stack. Most of the time, I can listen to those channels on the 7300 and that usually talks me out of it. But.. sometimes I hear people talking across the country on the CB bands. That's every bit as cool as HAM radio (when it's done like an adult). Every now and then, it's still tempting to CB.
Is there a reason why a cb radio is in a UA-cam video titled ham radio? The image at the beginning of the video had an image of a Browning Golden Eagle citizen band (CB) stuff!
I was there on Sunday and the flea market was like a ghost town. No problem walking the aisles in the vendor buildings. Some vendors packed up and left. Disappointing. The foot long hotdog was great. I will still go back next year.
Guess Eric. I had the two meter version. It's awesome radio. I wish Yaesu brings back radio like this It had its own little pack. It mounts to it. You can run 25 watts. Really cool radio
I picked up a Ten Tec Omni VI cheap and it is fully functional. Cheap. Btw I’m the guy with the tattoos that came up to you ate the booth. Don’t ever give up 😇
I bought a Siltronix 1011D(elta) back in '78 for $300. That 8950 amp tube kick my mom's butt having to replace them because I was in high school and couldn't afford to replace them. $50ea back in the day. I ran the Siltronix about 50 watts out into a Palomar 300. I was ramping close to 900 watts out SSB. Used to talk to military wives in the Panama Canal Zone when I'd get off school - daily. Point the Wilson Shooting Star south out of New Orleans and have convo for long times. I was a wannabe ham but my brain was not wired for Morse Code. So I was an outlaw SSB'er with a fat VFO up into and through 10m. Though, that spectrum was dead back then. Now after retirement at 57yo I went through Tech, elevated to General and hope to go Extra. KI5ADM - Covington, LA. Btw... My Siltronix and its replacement Phantom 500 amp with a Shure desk mic are in an airtight box in my closet. The thing that always made me nervous about the 1011D was the way she used to arc on power up. An old radio buddy of mine at the time suggested I place her in a 100 degree oven for a few minutes prior to power ON. That would take the moisture off her and not hurt the caps. Worked like a charm. To this day she still powers up with almost no freq drift. I can buy them all day long for $100 on eBay. They can make a shack look really nostalgic along with the old Swans and Collins.
I wana know where you get tubes tested? I have a tube radio i cant check the tubes on. Nobody around me has a tester. Every tester I look to buy is untested...lol Remember the good old days when most grocery stores had a tube tester right on the floor.
hi,interesting video,food for thought,can you help me,i live in a large city and suffer from interference ,what coax cable would you recommend to help with noise,my Gainmaster 5/8 wave gets between s9 and 10 plus,just interference,with the yagi much better between s3 and s4,i use a Icom ic 7300,and can spend up to 10 doller/euro per meter,11 meters is long enough,thanks,73 Rotterdam.
Your videos are very informative and well done. I would like to suggest a topic. I would like to see a real world demo of the AnyTone 878 talking to the 578 in crossband mode and then the 578 hitting a repeater. I am interested in how hot the radio gets and impact on your car battery. Could you do this with the car off rather than running so I could hike as far from the car as the 878 allows but further than trying to hit the repeater with the 878. The YpuTube videos I have seen are very basic without actually doing cross and. Thanks and keep up the good work.
I had a mark 2. I still have 2 mark 3s both with Siltronix model 90 vfos with browning one eighty amplifier and browning turner OEM mic. If you want to make the feedback longer a 20 uF capacitor in the underside of receiver is best. But if you want to make the sound longer which would be unnecessary a higher uF capacitor has to be used my other mark 3 has a variable capacitor mounted in the back of radio makes feedback ping squeal all different lengths plus cluck off for no sound if desired, I used a friends swan but sounds distorted on am there's a mod to get the am to sound good but I'm not sure how to do, I had the the 290 Yaesu I bought new in the 1980s but I returned it for a ht I should've kept the 290 which is the 2 meter version of the 690.
Hi I just got my very first cb radio today, a pretty nice rca co-pilot 14t303 base station, now I’ve got a question that I’m sure you know the answer to, now I don’t have the antenna for it yet but is it normal to not even here static with the squelch open or is it because there is no antenna it’s not even able to pick up static? I’d love to know
There are several problems for me. Where can you find tower and mast pipe? And, I need somebody professional to install it for me because I am too old.
I know every one of my subscribers will understand my love and theory for this topic.. There are still tons of people that know nothing about ham radio, but they have an interest in CB radio (11 meters). Encourage them to come here, teach them something don't bash them about CB radio.......Encourage them to continue in CB radio and when they walk through this 3 day convention they will have a very CLEAR perspective of what ham radio is all about. Sometimes, It takes one of us to invite a CB enthusiast to a hamfest to avoid the fear of going or lack of knowledge....CB is The gateway drug into this hobby. There is enough material on UA-cam about all the new products and vendors.. Let's drive some interest into the tailgate section to get someone started...
Never heard of the ham-fest in Orlando ?? Is it annual ? Thanks for posting , I’ve had my ticket for 7 years now, but I’m still a CB enthusiast as well . I will check out more videos on your channel 👌
Read my post below. I started there (CB) and I am now where I wanted to be back then. You either have the radio lust or you don't. Encourage ANY young person to get 'The Knack" (hahah) for radio. There's no better sense of achievement than talking to someone off a homemade Quad than some stupid internet channel.
"CB is The gateway drug into this hobby." In eight words you nailed it buddy! Drop your mic. (well, no not really)
Howdy to Scott and George! I might go double or nothing they'll be an 11 meter antenna among the antenna farm on the truck that never will see an antenna. lol
Hahaha cb is the gateway drug! :D
"Junk: stuff that I don't need, but I can't live without." Love it. 👍👍👍
690 R my first ham radio . Worked the world on 2.5 watts back in 1992 . Later added a 25 watt linear, even better . Now it seems the bare minimum is 100 watts. Love 6m.
Grew up with an interest in electronics, installed a CB radio in my Jeep when I was 26, heard them shooting skip and immediately wondered what was out there beyond the little bit of RF I was listening to. Here we are 8 years later, working on my General!
Welcome to Ham Radio & Congratulations !
just like me at a ham fest "Do I need it? No. Do I want it? Yes" lol
I love old CB radios too!
I love the old days ham,cb,old cars it's nice to reflect on , because you we were younger and mind flood's with who was there the car you had ect.just awesome. Tnx Eric another great video that people will watch over over and rember to some these day's are their good old ! Be cool and respect their time ,your action today is your memories of tomarow see be careful and collected good shit in you're head
I have a D104 mic collection, now they are just trophies. also had a few old tube radios in my day. Thanks for the video i enjoy seeing the old radios.
I'm a ham and still use 11m. Why not?
Talked to a ton of 690r's back in the late 80's early 90's! Smooth audio, nice sounding radios! I used an Icom IC-551 and a Mirage 150 watt amplifier
CB was my first radio as a kid and got me into the hobby. Just got my license the 12th of February. 73! KI5IED
I may be a ham but CB radios, especially Browning eagles have a huge soft apot for me. The Best friends ive made where on CB and I enjoy it more than HAM but I do both regularly. I was there for this years hamcation and came home with a few scanners and a motorola UHF HT1000 complete kit!
Don't forget the Ultra Great STONER CB's remember they had the outboard accessory which allowed you to have AM? Anyone also remember the C.P.I. Luxury line of CB'S?
Great job love to see the older stuff there no one ever shows that from cb to ham stuff thank you :)
I have an old RCI base station in my garage that I hop on to talk with truckers. Killer radio my grandpa has. He got me into CB now I want to get into HAM
I had CB radios in my vehicles back in the 70's. My friend was a radio man in the Air Force and has the knowledge needed to make our CB stations work properly. He also knows that certain conditions, like being near a lake or having snow on the ground improves transmission signals. We now have stations six miles apart that work very well during the day and at night. Antenna height makes a big difference in transmissions. His antenna is 45 feet high and mine is 54 feet high. Every night, about 10:30 p.m., we talk on channel 32 and often talk with other CB stations thirty miles away. I'm glad I got back into using CB radios.
We have a ch 32 club in SE GA! Not like it used to be though
Ham Radio 2.0 is a great channel too. I had a question on an old video and he replied in no time. Very impressive.
great finds,.. the D104 is a great mike,as u well know, . i used to have one, in my cb days,.. really miss that one,.. looking forward to all the upcoming vids with yr newly aquired boat anchors... all the best from A9
Yes you need to bring radios like this back they need to manufacture these radios again they were great radios I love backpacking with that radio
I am glad that you went to the Orlando Ham Fest I really appreciate it. Because I really wanted to go but didn't have the funds. Maybe next year hopefully I will get to meet you and all the other guys I like to watch here on UA-cam. And by the way that D-104 brings back memories of when I was a young man back in my 11 meter days. Anyway I am glad that you had a good time and by you going I was able to see what I missed. 73 AE4OY WILLIAM EM-81UF (OLDYELLA) SOUTH East Georgia
The meter on that Browning wasn't stuck. That meter swung backwards. Look at it again. I have two of them, the 23 channel version and the later 40 channel one.. Both have the backwards swing meters. I'm an Extra class, and still enjoy my collection of old CB radios. The Brownings, Trams Titan 1 thru 4 and the D201 and 201A, the Lafeyette Telsat, the Siltronix/Swans, the SBE Trinidad and several more. Now that I'm retired I've collected all the high price CB base units I couldn't afford when I was 20. An old man and his toys! 73, KO4AXN
Hey! Just thought I’d mention. That solar panel plug in available at auto parts stores, sold for trickle chargers, and you can get it with a pos an neg loop connector. Hope it helps!
I have had a few of the silver eagle chicken chokers, I still have a head to one. Bad thing about the vintage radios is a lot of times you have to go through and replace a lot of the electrolytics in them as they have dried out and are bad, or close to it. Looks like you had a awesome time . I had my start in the forbidden band myself and have a wolverine number but can't remember it. I probably have it written down somewhere. Longest contact I made on 11 meters was a gentleman in Naples Italy one summer morning. 73
Wished the ham Radio Rally's were like that in the UK. Its very difficult to find used equipment like that (a) in good working order, and (b) at bargain price.
Golden Eagles were some serious CB’s back in 1972. That Siltronix is nice also. Seemed like they used to sell for $500 in 1974.
Bill Capps my Dad had a set of Golden Eagles when I was young
I remember keying my D104 at the speaker of my old Radio Shack Navaho base and backing it off slowly. Made a similar Eagle noise. Oh God... Now I'm remembering a local fellow who had legit Eagles with a Laser 500 antenna on a 50ft tower. He OWNED this area. Add to that his 1kW amp and when he keyed you might as well go cut the grass or wash the car. His front to back ratio was such that when he keyed opposite of the rest of us locals, we could barely hear him. Laser 500's were the s' back in the day.
@@bigpoppa6998 are you into the hobby? If not, what can we do to help you along? Would you like radio references or a link to a local VE testing location? I think everyone here is to help.
Eli Wilson I appreciate it but I just was scrolling on UA-cam and this popped up. I really don’t have a place to put Radio an Neighbor way to close. But thank you very much for your offer.
@@eliwilson3714 I had a Navaho Pro Niner back in the day. I'm sure I still got it somewhere along with a Pierce Simpson Bengal SSB, a Pace 2300, and I'm sure my D104 lollipop. It might be time to start digging!
Love the Astatic D104 microphone Eric.
Mike N6IMY
Bob Heil says the thing on the bottom of the D104 is actually an electronic impedance changer from the 50,000 ohm crystal mic to something more usable around 1K.
I have an old ht1200 vhf handy for 2 meters, planning to use it for qrp dx later this summer. Might prove interesting because of the super long telescoping whip it has on it lol, what’s cool is it also has a hand mic, it’s a brick otherwise. None of my radios require tubes though.
Had a couple different mark 3's one I put a Siltronics 90 vfo on it plugged in to the channel 9 crystal socket . That allowed it to transmit on everything above 23 that the receiver could get great old radios .
Anybody remember the great POLY COM Radios? We had the top of the line the poly com PRO. Prior to that one of my brothers had an AIR CASTLE CB. Remember that one?
wow those prices where awesome!!! that golden eagle at 7:00 would be 500 to 600 around here (Atlanta) unreal the price difference.
I've still got a maco 300 timestamp 3:15 Nice loud amp! Great video! Also don't cheat yourself out of actually using the D-104 they are great mics! You might want to pop the face off and see if it's got the original mic pickup in the head of it. Cheers man!
Hi Eric, thank you so much for making this video, the old Browning station brought back some good memories from my first years discovering radio. Like most of us, I started with CB and those discovery years were the best. The only problem with used radios at hamfest is that you may end up with stuff you really don’t need just because it got you a bit emotional, hihi. Keep up the good work. 73 Pascal VA2PV
I have been going to Ham Fests in South Texas since 2003. There is always a HUGE amount of CB gear and there are ALWAYS a bunch of Mexican National Truck Drivers. They will buy ANYTHING with a heat sink on it.
Takes me back down memory lane. Always wanted a Golden Eagle back in 1972, but they where so expensive. KK7T.
The Browning's meter is not stuck! They are made that way. When powered up, it "falls" back to 0. I previously owned one and the Astatic Golden Eagle D104.
M Stover thank you, I learned this from another commenter. I love when you guys teach me this stuff thank you 73
Ive always been happy on CB with different amplifiers and radios.
CB is for sure the gateway drug for Ham Radio!! Enjoyed the video Eric. KI5HII
WOW, its been years, the Browning ping. When I had my Comms store/repair I was the Browning and Tram authorized service center. The sound of the tubes was the big thing back when. I need to hit a fest, its been 30-35 years. I think it was around 82-83 was my last fest and field day. WOW. The Yaesu 101, 902, were the hot numbers. Memories for sure
I have a Yaesu FT7B and love it. I used to have a Ranger 2970 and it was nice too.
there's one CB that i would love to get back... my old cobra 29-gtl-dx looks like the classic, but had 10m all the way up thru the eu cb frequencies (I was in the UK at the time and theirs were different to the EU)
Feed back during the transition from receive to transmit, causes the Browning eagle "ping". It was initially unintended but became famous. At least that's was what I was told.
Wow...what a memory jog! We had one local guy who had a Browning. I remember the PING. It was a status symbol!
The capacitor actually caused feedback. While the ping was active, and you moved the microphone around the radio, you could change the pitch. You could do the mod to the Mark 2 and mark 3, but I don't think you could do it to the Mark 4.
And if you have the squelch up the radio won't ping when you key it. Mark 2 and 3 receivers have a reverse AGC and the meter will normally rest at top scale with power off.
I think just about every hamfest i've been to has some type of CB stuff there. Something for everybody. I'd still have an 11 setup if anybody was still on it here. The flea market section is my favorite and where i dump all my money and go home with none and a carload of stuff i probably don't need.
I still have my Royse 619 base station still works great. And my silver Eagle.Cobra 21 gtl PC 33 mini 40.
Fantastic video! I would leave that hamfest broke (we don't have them that awesome here in Australia). FYI the FT690R is a great radio - Internal battery power, telescopic whip and SSB. It's actually worth a LOT more than $40!
Love when ever you talk about the Cb stuff thank you
THAT POOR GUY IN THE BACKGROUND, SPORTING YOUR SHIRT AND YOUR NOT TALKIN TO HIM...
🤣
Hi Eric, Love this video, Almost would want to come up from Australia for Hamcation, So much unbelievable gear, some much history, I can read your passion, well done Peter VK3TQ / VK2LD
I really liked the military solar panel , was that expensive? Great thing to have on field day or camping trips and since it is military grade it will hold up under adverse conditions.
It was $100 and I found it online, they sell for $1000 i should have bought them all..
Nice Galaxy 550...one of the radios in QST that I used to dream about getting...they were more on the budget end and more in my reach....with Collins on the Luxury end with no possibility of ever owning. Hope you can get it back on the air sometime.
Dad had a Golden Eagle in the early '70s. The ping you hear
when the mike was keyed was
intentional. You were on top of
the world if you had one. The
counterpart to the Golden Eagle
called a Demco Super Satellite.
We had one of those too and when
toy keyed the mike on that one,
it sounded like someone dropped a ping pong ball when you transmitted. Love the Comstat 35
and the D-104 lollypop mike you
showed early on in your video. Had 'em both when I was in my 20s and loved 'em both. Even though they were the same radio
inside, the Comstat 35 was direct
competition for the Robyn T-123B,
aka the egg cooker. So named
because of the HUGE amount of heat generated by the tubes inside
it while the set was up and running. With the range boost on the Comstat 35, and the D-104 mike, it was indeed possible for
you to overmodulate and sound
very distorted to those who were
listening to you. There was no was
no way that you could use the range boost and crank up the modulation on the D-104 and use
them together to boost your output . You could only use one or
the other to boost your signal strength. Hope you enjoy your new
Golden Eagle, we certainly did!
John here I had the Silronix 1011D with a non peer D-104 loved it my dad had Swan 500 and 1100 watts Swam linar we talked all the time at that time phone calls long distance calling so we used the radio.s
I still have one of the first Motorola Mocat 40s that hit my town back in the late 70s.
OH MAN!!! You were that close to the Eagles!!! NO GUTS NO GLORY!!! I just knew you were gonna drop that tailgate and we'd hear the PEYAN AN AN AN NGGGG of that Browning keying up! Oh such fond memories of that old radio and a local guy on "Super Bowl 6" that had one, along with a "foot warmer" of course... if you were in a thousand or two yards from him, you knew when he was on the "6" and you were on the opposite end of the 11m band, you'd hear that unique Eagle sound!!!
There used to be a CBer in Montgomery, Alabama with Browning Golden Eagles, an Amp, and Moonrakers beams up a tower. He owned the airwaves. His audio was great and the eagles had their scream. His CB call was Ronald McDonald.
I want that rig, looks like a super good bargain if no repairs are required. It looks mint!
I miss them old CB radios. I too had a Golden Eagle. Wish I never sold mines. Watching this video makes me want to get back into it. "Do I need it?" No! " Do I want it?" Yes! LoL! Did you end up buying the Golden Eagle Radio? Look forward to more of these videos.
That place is amazing! I love ham fests and swap meets.
i still have my Yaesu ft-690R II it works great!
real good 6m radio.
Looks like fun brother love all that old stuff myself....👍
Well said my friend... a great way to encourage the youth to get into the hobby.. 73s Robert Haines City FL...
This was awesome !
Back in the late 70's and 80's CB amplifiers and import radios were a "back room" transaction. You had to know someone who knew someone and they were never on display. Of course that was when the FCC was still doing their job on 11 meters.
My first CB radio was a Sonic 23 channel mobile radio that had the microphone hard wired in. I used to tune my shortwave radio to the same frequency and key the microphone while moving it close then away from the speaker to get feedback to make everyone think I had a Browning. Good memories of those days. Most of the radios I owned were Cobra. The first antenna I had mounted outside was the Starduster. I think it was made by Antenna Specialists. Like you said, CB is the gateway drug.
I bought my Antenna Specialists "Starduster" at a Lafayette Radio store in 1976 , in Salem Oregon. It had a DB gain of 5.0. It cost $45 great Antenna. People told me that it would bleed over several channels though. I also bought a 23 channel Lafayette HB-525F radio, it cost $179. I bought the PS-44 power supply so it could be used as a base station, that was $45. The radio would mount to it as a mated unit. I also got the HB-506A portable battery case that would also mount to the back of the radio using the threaded thumb wheels that you would use to mount it in a vehicle to the mounting bracket. It took 10 "C" size NI-CAD batteries that were recharged by plugging in the back of the power supply in a special socket.It had a very long telescopic whip Antenna, a battery meter, and a shoulder harness wit a pad on it. That was $32. It was heavy because everything was made of steel, no plastic except the channel selector with the numbers on it. That was one powerful walkie-talkie. I had to replace the Antenna 3 times because I broke it off getting it snagged on things. $8 each time. I bought a 50' push up pole, $50, 100' of RG-8U Coax w/PL-259 connectors soldered on, $50. I finally bought a Turner +2 desk Mic ,with the connector soldered on, $45. I already had the guy wires, and the eye screws. Lafayette Radio did all the soldering for me in their store. What a fantastic store that was. They even had other name brand products in there. That was my first real CB setup. I was 17 years old, and had a summer job working for the Parks & Recreation in Salem Oregon. No sales tax in Oregon. I had that radio until Nov of 2000 . I would've still had it if my house wouldn't have burned down. Oh well, I'm alive. Those prices weren't too bad back then for high quality electronics, and their accessories. 73's everyone 🙂🙂
the recieve meter is NOT stuck.plug it in,turn it on,warm it up,and it should function normally.My mk 2 always rested there whon the radio was off.
Only things I remember about the Browning golden eagles is the transmit key up racket (thought it was mildly annoying, not so much that I recall complaining to anyone) and they were on the expensive side.
People did that deliberately. I own a stock Mark 3 with an unamplified D104 and unless the squelch is off and the mike next to the speaker it doesn't ping. People *wanted* everyone to know that they were on a Browning.
Didn't snag the Mark 3? Gotta watch those Siltronix rigs; they tend to multiply like rabbits! I started with a C, now have that and two early D models.
Much has been written about these drifting. If you work the frequency setting variable caps on the VFO once in a while it will clean off the silver oxide that contributes massively to the drift! They make good contest radios with a wide 4 kHz filter, relative immunity to SWR below 3:1, and 50 to 75 watts out from the 8950. I use a Swan external speaker for a little better audio.
Just so you know,The browning eagle is a Screaming Eagle in the 11 meter world..Thanks for showing use alot of nice radios.
12:29, camera checking Jason for cataracts.
I did that to him last year and he commented about how he hated me doing that, so I did it again for fun HAHA
Meter is not stuck it means receive cap is loaded receiver works for sure when u turn it on the meter will go to zero buy it
Dude love the videos,I live I a apartment and I can’t put a antenna on the roof,I’m gets Bearcat 980 on Wednesday,I have a k30 antenna,my question is can I put that k30 on a air conditioner and use the top metal of the air conditioner as the ground plain because it’s metal??Thanks John.😎😎😎😎😎😎
Wow, I can remember my Moonraker on a 75’ crank up tower at my house. Was using a Yaesu with a 2000 watt amplifier. I probably had every kind of radio sold to try including all the ham units. In my car I had a Browning LTD that had well over a100 channels with a Palomar 200 watt amp. I was the king of the hill back in those days. I used to sell CB’s back then and a lot of NY State trooper had CB’s sold by me. I still have a Browning LTD in my motorhome with a 100 watt Palomar amp. No fun anymore. When the skip used to come in I would talk to just about every state and country there is. My dad had a General license at the time and I would get all kinds of flack from him.
Admittedly, I lean towards being a radio voyeur. I'd usually rather listen than talk. So I've got the radios.. and 2 scanners going most of the time. But every now and then I get the itch to add a CB to the stack. Most of the time, I can listen to those channels on the 7300 and that usually talks me out of it. But.. sometimes I hear people talking across the country on the CB bands. That's every bit as cool as HAM radio (when it's done like an adult). Every now and then, it's still tempting to CB.
That’s the lollipop mic I think was by torner which made the super sidekick II.
Love the Mark III's, but I'm more into the Tram D201A's and the Demco's. Also, a bit sad that you completely skipped over the FT-101's.
That meter is not stuck on the browning when you turn it on it swings back I have the mark Iva
I saw so many cool vintage rigs at HamCation!
My dad had a browning eagle he took that D104 moving the mic around made that feedback on that radio scream
Is there a reason why a cb radio is in a UA-cam video titled ham radio? The image at the beginning of the video had an image of a Browning Golden Eagle citizen band (CB) stuff!
I am drooling seeing all that tube equipment ...lol
Carlisle Forrester I love tubes😉 lol jk
I was there on Sunday and the flea market was like a ghost town. No problem walking the aisles in the vendor buildings. Some vendors packed up and left. Disappointing. The foot long hotdog was great. I will still go back next year.
Guess Eric. I had the two meter version. It's awesome radio. I wish Yaesu brings back radio like this It had its own little pack. It mounts to it. You can run 25 watts. Really cool radio
Never had a 690R, but I had the 6mtr Yaesu converter. Sold it and bought a Swan 650
I picked up a Ten Tec Omni VI cheap and it is fully functional. Cheap. Btw I’m the guy with the tattoos that came up to you ate the booth. Don’t ever give up 😇
Bro it was great seeing you. You really made me feel good with your story. I told my wife about it. Thank you for being there bro.. 73
I bought a Siltronix 1011D(elta) back in '78 for $300. That 8950 amp tube kick my mom's butt having to replace them because I was in high school and couldn't afford to replace them. $50ea back in the day. I ran the Siltronix about 50 watts out into a Palomar 300. I was ramping close to 900 watts out SSB. Used to talk to military wives in the Panama Canal Zone when I'd get off school - daily. Point the Wilson Shooting Star south out of New Orleans and have convo for long times. I was a wannabe ham but my brain was not wired for Morse Code. So I was an outlaw SSB'er with a fat VFO up into and through 10m. Though, that spectrum was dead back then. Now after retirement at 57yo I went through Tech, elevated to General and hope to go Extra. KI5ADM - Covington, LA. Btw... My Siltronix and its replacement Phantom 500 amp with a Shure desk mic are in an airtight box in my closet. The thing that always made me nervous about the 1011D was the way she used to arc on power up. An old radio buddy of mine at the time suggested I place her in a 100 degree oven for a few minutes prior to power ON. That would take the moisture off her and not hurt the caps. Worked like a charm. To this day she still powers up with almost no freq drift. I can buy them all day long for $100 on eBay. They can make a shack look really nostalgic along with the old Swans and Collins.
The Silver Eagle is the mic I used when I talked on a Cobra 2000. That one is missing the PTT at the base of the microphone.
I wana know where you get tubes tested? I have a tube radio i cant check the tubes on. Nobody around me has a tester. Every tester I look to buy is untested...lol Remember the good old days when most grocery stores had a tube tester right on the floor.
The D104 is a classic radio mic! You’ll love it! 73 de K2CJB
the meter is not stuck, the transmitter needle goes to full scale when turned off
The down side to any Hamfest is how they have a tendency to put my wallet on a diet.
no, the downfall is placing an ATM in the same location where I can order beer.. Turned out to cost me $500 HAHA
I live in Washington state
I don't think I'm going to be able to make it to hamcation
At least you arent in Alaska! Lol
hi,interesting video,food for thought,can you help me,i live in a large city and suffer from interference ,what coax cable would you recommend to help with noise,my Gainmaster 5/8 wave gets between s9 and 10 plus,just interference,with the yagi much better between s3 and s4,i use a Icom ic 7300,and can spend up to 10 doller/euro per meter,11 meters is long enough,thanks,73 Rotterdam.
afortunados ustedes de tener mucha tecnología y participar en esas ferias de radio afición Saludos de chile CA2 LSI LUIS
Your videos are very informative and well done. I would like to suggest a topic. I would like to see a real world demo of the AnyTone 878 talking to the 578 in crossband mode and then the 578 hitting a repeater. I am interested in how hot the radio gets and impact on your car battery. Could you do this with the car off rather than running so I could hike as far from the car as the 878 allows but further than trying to hit the repeater with the 878. The YpuTube videos I have seen are very basic without actually doing cross and. Thanks and keep up the good work.
I have more on the way with this radio sorry been busy i will be touching on this subject
Nice trip man that ain't junk just used and broke in ready to use
the Ranger 2995 with the right jumpers moved will go 26-32 mhz
That 690 seems brand new...bargain
I had a mark 2. I still have 2 mark 3s both with Siltronix model 90 vfos with browning one eighty amplifier and browning turner OEM mic. If you want to make the feedback longer a 20 uF capacitor in the underside of receiver is best. But if you want to make the sound longer which would be unnecessary a higher uF capacitor has to be used my other mark 3 has a variable capacitor mounted in the back of radio makes feedback ping squeal all different lengths plus cluck off for no sound if desired, I used a friends swan but sounds distorted on am there's a mod to get the am to sound good but I'm not sure how to do, I had the the 290 Yaesu I bought new in the 1980s but I returned it for a ht I should've kept the 290 which is the 2 meter version of the 690.
Hi I just got my very first cb radio today, a pretty nice rca co-pilot 14t303 base station, now I’ve got a question that I’m sure you know the answer to, now I don’t have the antenna for it yet but is it normal to not even here static with the squelch open or is it because there is no antenna it’s not even able to pick up static? I’d love to know
There are several problems for me. Where can you find tower and mast pipe? And, I need somebody professional to install it for me because I am too old.
I have 5 Brownings in my garage right now. Browning fever!