Yes I can take a cobra 29 and take the cover off and do a few simple adjustments. Have no real clue how it sounds unless I am talkign to someone at the same time. I have no clue if it is splattering across 4,5 or 10 channels but hey I can do it. And no I don't go clipping anything.
Just google cobra 29 mods.
If you want a super tune then just cut D11 and remove the slugs under the wax covered tuning coils and stretch out the horizontal coil near the antenna port. When you get complaints then send the radio to Sparkies or Doug at custom cb radios.com and have it done correctly.
I think doug charges about 20 bucks for a peak and tune. Not sure what Al (sparkies) charges since he usually does it for free if you buy the radio from him.
peaking a cb radio
Discussion in 'CB Radio Forum' started by midnight_trucker_1971, Dec 24, 2010.
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That's the problem. When you start cutting the limiter diodes, it makes the radio sound distorted. I don't know of anyone who enjoys listening to a splatter box radio. I know I don't. IMO that's as bad if not worse than the fool who runs his echo up so much he steps all over his own transmission. I'll take clean clear audio over power any day.
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The only time you run into distortion or over modulation problems is when you clip the limiter.turn the gain on the echo board wide open,run a low dead key,install a swing/mod kit,spread apart the little copper coils that are in the back back of the radio and dont bother to tune the final bias.Then your going to sound like joe blow super trucker! If you follow CB tricks info and take your time then this will not be a problem.
A lot of you dont understand that the vast ammount of power you see on a peak reading meter is over modulation,distortion and harmonics,not true power.You dont want to hear that and you sure as hell wont hear a CB tech tell you that but the way it is, is the way it is. If you tune a radio using the average setting rather than peak setting on a meter then you will see that after about 4 to 5 adjustments inside of just about any radio your not going to see anymore power out of the radio regardless of what you do unless you do mosfet upgrades or volt the finals ( BOOM!). But on the peak setting of a meter the more you turn those screws,to a point.The more power your going to see but that is not true power,its harmonics which causes a peak reading meter to show more power.
Don't believe me? the next time you do into your fav CB shop have them to show you a 50 watt cobra 29 on the average power setting and not peak. They CANT do it and odds are they WONT even try! -
I have read the numbers claimed,heard the radios on air and have looked at the mods that are done and what they look like on a scope. Radios are loud and proud all right,look at em on a scope and you will see why.
You know what people say about opinions right? Well,i just farted
by the way.....
Merry Christmas everyone!!!!!!! -
Cuting the limiter is at best risky ......
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The only radios that I have ever adjusted the limiter to 3/4 or a tad more are the drivers that I run with that are quiet talkers and hold the mic an arms length away.
The idea of peaking and tuning a radio is to get the radio to were it was designed to be as far as performance. As with all mass produced products, no two radios are the same. Some come out of the box doing great while others come out of the box barely able to make it across the median.
We have drivers with box stock radio that do great and sound wonderful while we have other drivers with the same setup that you can not hear for ####. These are the drivers that I aproach about getting their radio tuned a bit. The ones that have great working setups, I tell them that there is no need for it because theirs works great.
Peaking and tuning is not about opening up a radio and replacing a bunch of stuff and turning a bunch of pots etc to push the radio to its absolute limit. It is just about making the radio do what is was supposed to do in the first place. IE fixing the sloppy workmanship that you see in mass production. -
Its all about what you want. A basic P&T you can do your self. A full blown upgrade to get the absolute max performance from a radio,such as a clean receive,completely on freq for SSB use without drifting,change in the audio parts to get a fuller richer transmit sound,Mosfet upgrades on a SSB radio.so forth and so on require the scope,signal generator,multimeter and so forth.
All depends on what you want or need and how much your willing to spend to get it.I prefer to save a few bucks and do it myself,if i cant i take it to someone i trust. Problem is you cant trust 98% of cb techs! -
Then I could run down to the local TS and pickup a sheap power meter and start peaking and tuning radios for money????? Wow!!!!!
I would love to see you go into a competent CB shop, pick out a new radio and sit at the counter and P&T it then put it on the air with the shops radio that was done using proper equipment and see which radio does better. Kind of a Key down with just two barefoot radios.
Then let the shop put a swing kit in his radio and see who gets more roses on the air at any distance.
I wish christmas had not broke me because I would have put up the money for two matching in the box stock cobra 29 LTDs and paid the shop to do the P&T on his. -
.........i still remember the CB tech out in little rock that thought,after hearing me on the air, i was talking SSB on a true ham rig, he flipped out when i pulled the radio out and he saw that it was just an old Uniden Grant XL! Or the trucker who thought that i was running a big amp,it was a barefoot PC76! It's not what you use to tune a radio,its how you tune that radio that makes all the difference.
I bet you also think that an amplifier is supposed to make you louder to!
This is from my site,a little info to arm yourself with.
You will also see cb shops spreading those little copper coils apart.This does not increase power,only harmonics. I knew a tech in Conover NC that went by Triple R that would show any export radio doing over 125 watts on a peak meter,and it did. But the very same radio,because of all the excessive harmonics produced by the radio,it would actually transmit on more than one channel!
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