Member I
Member I
Off-Road Ranger I
Member I
I have a couple of Uniden products and they all work great (CB radio and a handheld scanner). Midland radios are fine products as well. Do you prefer the look, feel, size or mounting of either of them? I don’t think there’s a wrong choice here.
Traveler III
Member I
Both are quality names, so there isn't really a wrong choice.
One suggestion I would make is, if one has a scan feature, you may want to use that one. It's nice to be able to monitor traffic across the whole band rather than being forced to manually check each channel as you go. That's the one and only thing lacking from my CB, and one that I often wish it had.
Member III
17011
I have the Uniden Bearcat 980SS which scan entire band or scans my stored favorite channels only. I had a Cobra 19, which was a basic with no scanning, no backlight etc. I ditched that after I realized I wanted scanning.Both are quality names, so there isn't really a wrong choice.
One suggestion I would make is, if one has a scan feature, you may want to use that one. It's nice to be able to monitor traffic across the whole band rather than being forced to manually check each channel as you go. That's the one and only thing lacking from my CB, and one that I often wish it had.
Member III
Member III
Off-Road Ranger I
Expedition Master III
I've been running a Midlands for a few years with no issues.
What @MuckSavage said is very good info. Don't key the radio without an antenna attached it can cause
permanent damager to the radio.
Member III
I know many OB members prefer Ham, but for local use in a area, during a emergency, would not more people likely have access to a CB, over a dedicated licensed unit for Ham? Having both is the best of both worlds, as some on the boards have commented on. Large home antennas, and area repeaters, could be subject to high wind damage.
Pathfinder I