Enthusiast II
A newbie here, and enjoy all the posts about comm.
My thoughts quickly:
FRS is really not worth the funds expended. Line of sight radios that don't have much for hills etc. The miles listed on the package are really not accurate. Good if you are close to each other and not in the next valley.
GMRS is fine, and actually requires a license, no tests, just pay your fee and send in your application. The radios vary with which ones you have and what antenna your're using. Though the distance covered is not much better than FRS radios.
CB could be ok if you had a good antenna and others weren't around (though that is true what ever freq you use). CB radios are normally just on channels and if you find unused channels the better off you are. CB is 27 MHz, the 11 meter band. a dipole would work, as I have used one in the past, a good mobile whip works well. CB will do the distance, normally, depending on conditions. Just a quick note, normally a CB antenna will not work for 2m etc. Your talking about HF and VHF, different animals.
Ham Radio is good though you have to have a license, and now a days, one is not hard to obtain. All the levels have their test questions and answers available to study and practice. The FCC has now decided to charge a fee for your license, $35. Once you get a license, the radios are limitless, and distance is much improved, though still depending upon your antenna. 2m and 70cm, handy-talkies work well even as simplex from one mountain top to the other, that you see in the distance. Repeaters are all over these days, though they are not secure if your looking for secure comms. Though nothing you put over the air is actually secure, anyone with a receiver can hear and they normally do. Small portable rigs with a good antenna and low power are used by many out in the woods and on mountain tops, and they are able to reach long distances. So the possibilities are actually endless.
So being a newbie here, I'd go for a Ham license first, with CB second. Guess it all depends on the funds available for the gear you want and the distance you wish to work.
Just my quick few cents worth whatever you put on it.
My thoughts quickly:
FRS is really not worth the funds expended. Line of sight radios that don't have much for hills etc. The miles listed on the package are really not accurate. Good if you are close to each other and not in the next valley.
GMRS is fine, and actually requires a license, no tests, just pay your fee and send in your application. The radios vary with which ones you have and what antenna your're using. Though the distance covered is not much better than FRS radios.
CB could be ok if you had a good antenna and others weren't around (though that is true what ever freq you use). CB radios are normally just on channels and if you find unused channels the better off you are. CB is 27 MHz, the 11 meter band. a dipole would work, as I have used one in the past, a good mobile whip works well. CB will do the distance, normally, depending on conditions. Just a quick note, normally a CB antenna will not work for 2m etc. Your talking about HF and VHF, different animals.
Ham Radio is good though you have to have a license, and now a days, one is not hard to obtain. All the levels have their test questions and answers available to study and practice. The FCC has now decided to charge a fee for your license, $35. Once you get a license, the radios are limitless, and distance is much improved, though still depending upon your antenna. 2m and 70cm, handy-talkies work well even as simplex from one mountain top to the other, that you see in the distance. Repeaters are all over these days, though they are not secure if your looking for secure comms. Though nothing you put over the air is actually secure, anyone with a receiver can hear and they normally do. Small portable rigs with a good antenna and low power are used by many out in the woods and on mountain tops, and they are able to reach long distances. So the possibilities are actually endless.
So being a newbie here, I'd go for a Ham license first, with CB second. Guess it all depends on the funds available for the gear you want and the distance you wish to work.
Just my quick few cents worth whatever you put on it.