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What is your favorite Ham or CB Radio of all time?

Like the title says, what is your favorite ham or CB radio of all time (so far) and why? Please don't just give us a make/model - tell us why you like it!


P.S. If you're replying to this thread, you could win a new radio! Check this link to find out how!
That's a tough question, especially when I got into radio in the 60s.

Favorite CB: E.F. Johnson Messenger 124 & Midland 13-880b. I liked the design of the radio, inside and out. It was a smart looking rig and had excellent adjacent channel rejection. I used the E.F. Johnson factory desk mic, whose color matched the base station, and received compliments on my audio. The Midland 13-880b, because it was the first radio I bought, that brought me into the world of SSB (terrible adj.ch.rej though). 40ch radio: Don Stoner's Stoner Pro40 - hands down!

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Ham Radio:
Yaesu FT-101E and Kenwood TS-50. I had that bad batch of e-caps replaced, as well as de-glued about 3 years ago and it'll still be working fine when I'll just be dust in the wind. I liked the way the FT-101 looked, as well as how easy it was to use. Rigs with tube finals could take more of a beating if the SWR was over 3:1, and with the optional external digital readout, I never got too close to the edge of each band. With the optional expansion boards, testing and repairing it was a lot easier. The FT-101 used price has remained consistent from one decade to another (usually around $400 +/- 10%). One weird cosmetic aspect was the heavy barely see thru plastic "peel off" faceplate protection that no one seemed to want to remove. I was doing a lot of buying and reselling equipment in the '90s and more than 50% of any version of those FT-101's still had the (now) gnarly looking plastic on the faceplate. Non smoker 101 plastic was just kinda dirty, with shrinkage around the edges, and a slight amount of yellowing. Ones where probably the first owner was a smoker looked bad - really bad. If I had to put a name on how bad it looked, the first thing that popped into my head was the title of a 1990s movie: "The Many Faces of Death". Next...



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My first TS-50 was an excellent mobile radio. I had a shelf installed across the width of the windshield in my "deluxe" Chrysler mini-van (the one that had the captains chairs, along with 2 rows of folding seats behind them) with the TS-50 mounted just above, to the right side of my head. Besides having a great receiver, and excellent transmitter, that got me many unsolicited compliments on my transmit audio, it was pretty hard to screw up a setting while beep-beep-bopping down the road, thanks to it's minimalist approach of "less is better" design. ... A design that carried on with its simplistic menu. The only thing I didn't care for on this radio was the VFO tuning knob. A little dimple on the knob would have made a world of difference to me. I "lost" that radio in a divorce, but buying another one was always in the back of my mind. I ran across one that wasn't beat up outside, and perfect inside. It had been re-capped, along with a few resistors replaced, aligned, and came in its factory box. My driving days dropped drastically a few years back, the van and its shelf were long gone, and now, when driving, there just isn't any room for this, or any permanent mount radio. I use it now for a week or so in the shack, otherwise, it resides in its box in the closet (along with some other friends to keep it company)...

Sorry 'bout the length of my answer, but my fingers wanted to talk, and the caffeine kicked in about the time I read this post. I won something a few months back and don't care to again (maybe next year when it's a FTdx-101), so if there's a list, scratch my name off of it for this one.

73
Woody
 
I have owned several over the years, and would never part with the one I have...best mobile Kenwood ever made, hands down.
 
I have three Midland 13-885 and one 13-880b and these, and especially the 13-885, has a very special value for me because it it was my first SSB transceiver. Every time I switch them on all the memories comes as they were yesterday! Well ... the 13-885 was my favorite CB as well as Lafayette HE20T and of course the good looking - only AM - base station Midland 13-877.
 
There’s just no feeling like sitting in front of one of these and reaching for the mic. Especially on a winter’s night with the room lights turned down low. :giggle:
I know exactly what you mean. No LED's with countless colors, just the beautiful lighting from incandescent bulbs which makes ones brain more happy and gives peace in mind. I do not mind adding some smell from varm tubes. I started with tube radios and I do have some of them in my shack as well as tube (4-1000A) amplifiers.
 

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