Subj : Re: Wannbe HAM To : Tony Langdon From : Joe Delahaye Date : Sat Sep 17 2016 10:28 am Re: Re: Wannbe HAM By: Tony Langdon to Joe Delahaye on Sat Sep 17 2016 17:55:00 TL> A lot of 23 channel CBs found their way down here too. Technically illegal TL> I think, but once the 40 channel band plan was adopted, authorities pretty TL> much turned a blind eye, as they were operating within specs on the 23 TL> channels they were capable of. The 18 channel sets were officially phased TL> out within a few years, but remained on air for many years afterwards. TL> Probably some still out in the wild now. :) I imagine much the same happened here. I gave my set to my son in law, as he was a trucker. I dont think they have radios in their trucks any more, at least not the company he drives for. Not allowed to talk and drive at same time TL> The latest round of obsolescence occurs when the 40 channel UHF spec TL> sunsets in 2017, leaving only 80 channel radios legal for use on the UHF TL> CB band, but I suspect we'll see old gems like the Philips FM-320 on air TL> for many years to come. :) Not sure what the new public radio service is called these days, but it uses a different spectrun I believe TL> And we also needed a licence in Australia to operate a CB until 1994. I TL> did have a licence, two actually - one for UHF, one for 27 MHz. We were TL> supposed to licence each individual radio, though I went with one per TL> band, since I had at least one radio on each band. For most of thoe years, TL> I had at least 2 CBs on each band. All licences held by the one person TL> generally had the same callsign, so it was hard to tell. Cant remember what mine was , and yes, actually legally needed one for each set. I had one and my wife had one. I used mine for both mobile and station. --- SBBSecho 3.00-Win32 * Origin: The Lions Den BBS, Trenton, On, CDN (1:249/303) .