• Radio shack TRC-226 handheld: comments?

    From parkjason.jp@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Jamison Gray on Sat Dec 7 00:48:53 2019
    On Wednesday, May 5, 1993 at 7:38:46 AM UTC-5, Jamison Gray wrote:
    Radio Shack has a compact 40-channel handheld CB on sale,
    the TRC-226. While it has all the power of the bigger
    handhelds in the store (4W send, 5W receive), it's considerably
    smaller -- a bit taller and slimmer than a PRO-34 scanner.
    It costs $100, on sale from $140. It has an LCD display,
    and a novel design: the bottom half slides off, and it's
    supplied with two bottoms halves, one for regular batteries
    and a slightly larger one for NiCads (since more are needed).
    It has jacks for external mic, speaker, and power. With
    external power, the bottom half can be left off entirely.
    It's on the back page of the latest Radio Shaft flyer.

    Does anyone know anything more about this unit? How does
    its audio quality stack up against the larger (and generally
    cheaper) handhelds? If it really functions as well,
    I don't mind paying a little extra for the compactness.

    This would be my first CB; I plan to use it both for mobile
    purposes (hiking, etc.), and in the car, with external mic
    and antenna, and maybe speaker.

    A higher level question: does it make sense to try to use
    a handheld as a ready-to-go-mobile car CB? Or, once I add
    an external mic, speaker, and power adapter, have I spent
    as much as I would on a cheap car CB, and compromised
    on sound quality or anything else? I just read the positive
    comments on the $39.95 GE radios, and it made me wonder
    whether it's silly to make one radio perform two functions.

    Thanks a lot,
    -- Jamie Gray
    --
    Jamie Gray, jamison@Eng.sun.COM "I am the milkman of human kindness; Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, CA I will leave you an extra pint"

    Yeah, I know this post is from 1993 but what the hey, I just picked one of these up for 15 dollars at a pawn shop. brand new.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Niggertronix@21:1/5 to parkjason.jp@gmail.com on Sun Dec 8 00:03:01 2019
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2019 00:48:53 -0800 (PST)
    parkjason.jp@gmail.com wrote:

    On Wednesday, May 5, 1993 at 7:38:46 AM UTC-5, Jamison Gray wrote:
    Radio Shack has a compact 40-channel handheld CB on sale,
    the TRC-226. While it has all the power of the bigger
    handhelds in the store (4W send, 5W receive), it's considerably
    smaller -- a bit taller and slimmer than a PRO-34 scanner.
    It costs $100, on sale from $140. It has an LCD display,
    and a novel design: the bottom half slides off, and it's
    supplied with two bottoms halves, one for regular batteries
    and a slightly larger one for NiCads (since more are needed).
    It has jacks for external mic, speaker, and power. With
    external power, the bottom half can be left off entirely.
    It's on the back page of the latest Radio Shaft flyer.

    Does anyone know anything more about this unit? How does
    its audio quality stack up against the larger (and generally
    cheaper) handhelds? If it really functions as well,
    I don't mind paying a little extra for the compactness.

    This would be my first CB; I plan to use it both for mobile
    purposes (hiking, etc.), and in the car, with external mic
    and antenna, and maybe speaker.

    A higher level question: does it make sense to try to use
    a handheld as a ready-to-go-mobile car CB? Or, once I add
    an external mic, speaker, and power adapter, have I spent
    as much as I would on a cheap car CB, and compromised
    on sound quality or anything else? I just read the positive
    comments on the $39.95 GE radios, and it made me wonder
    whether it's silly to make one radio perform two functions.

    Thanks a lot,
    -- Jamie Gray
    --
    Jamie Gray, jamison@Eng.sun.COM "I am the milkman of human
    kindness; Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, CA I will leave you
    an extra pint"

    Yeah, I know this post is from 1993 but what the hey, I just picked
    one of these up for 15 dollars at a pawn shop. brand new.

    You must be the proudest nigger in the universe for caring about that,
    whitey.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From None@nospam.fu@21:1/5 to parkjason.jp@gmail.com on Sun Dec 8 09:32:33 2019
    On Sat, 7 Dec 2019 00:48:53 -0800 (PST), parkjason.jp@gmail.com wrote:

    On Wednesday, May 5, 1993 at 7:38:46 AM UTC-5, Jamison Gray wrote:
    Radio Shack has a compact 40-channel handheld CB on sale,
    the TRC-226. While it has all the power of the bigger
    handhelds in the store (4W send, 5W receive), it's considerably
    smaller -- a bit taller and slimmer than a PRO-34 scanner.
    It costs $100, on sale from $140. It has an LCD display,
    and a novel design: the bottom half slides off, and it's
    supplied with two bottoms halves, one for regular batteries
    and a slightly larger one for NiCads (since more are needed).
    It has jacks for external mic, speaker, and power. With
    external power, the bottom half can be left off entirely.
    It's on the back page of the latest Radio Shaft flyer.

    Does anyone know anything more about this unit? How does
    its audio quality stack up against the larger (and generally
    cheaper) handhelds? If it really functions as well,
    I don't mind paying a little extra for the compactness.

    This would be my first CB; I plan to use it both for mobile
    purposes (hiking, etc.), and in the car, with external mic
    and antenna, and maybe speaker.

    A higher level question: does it make sense to try to use
    a handheld as a ready-to-go-mobile car CB? Or, once I add
    an external mic, speaker, and power adapter, have I spent
    as much as I would on a cheap car CB, and compromised
    on sound quality or anything else? I just read the positive
    comments on the $39.95 GE radios, and it made me wonder
    whether it's silly to make one radio perform two functions.

    Thanks a lot,
    -- Jamie Gray
    --
    Jamie Gray, jamison@Eng.sun.COM "I am the milkman of human kindness; >> Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, CA I will leave you an extra pint"

    Yeah, I know this post is from 1993 but what the hey, I just picked one of these up for 15 dollars at a pawn shop. brand new.

    Good find. I gotta start looking at the Pawns in my area.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jeff Grant@21:1/5 to Jamison Gray on Mon Dec 21 20:50:53 2020
    On Wednesday, May 5, 1993 at 8:38:46 a.m. UTC-4, Jamison Gray wrote:
    Radio Shack has a compact 40-channel handheld CB on sale,
    the TRC-226. While it has all the power of the bigger
    handhelds in the store (4W send, 5W receive), it's considerably
    smaller -- a bit taller and slimmer than a PRO-34 scanner.
    It costs $100, on sale from $140. It has an LCD display,
    and a novel design: the bottom half slides off, and it's
    supplied with two bottoms halves, one for regular batteries
    and a slightly larger one for NiCads (since more are needed).
    It has jacks for external mic, speaker, and power. With
    external power, the bottom half can be left off entirely.
    It's on the back page of the latest Radio Shaft flyer.
    Does anyone know anything more about this unit? How does
    its audio quality stack up against the larger (and generally
    cheaper) handhelds? If it really functions as well,
    I don't mind paying a little extra for the compactness.
    This would be my first CB; I plan to use it both for mobile
    purposes (hiking, etc.), and in the car, with external mic
    and antenna, and maybe speaker.
    A higher level question: does it make sense to try to use
    a handheld as a ready-to-go-mobile car CB? Or, once I add
    an external mic, speaker, and power adapter, have I spent
    as much as I would on a cheap car CB, and compromised
    on sound quality or anything else? I just read the positive
    comments on the $39.95 GE radios, and it made me wonder
    whether it's silly to make one radio perform two functions.
    Thanks a lot,
    -- Jamie Gray
    --
    Jamie Gray, jam...@Eng.sun.COM "I am the milkman of human kindness;
    Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, CA I will leave you an extra pint"
    i own a cobra hhrt50

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Guglielmo Marconi@21:1/5 to jeffgrant4534@gmail.com on Tue Dec 22 16:32:56 2020
    In article <4a511808-b71c-4e8b-b0eb-a98bebbd968an@googlegroups.com>, JeffGrant <jeffgrant4534@gmail.com> wrote:

    i own a cobra hhrt50


    Yes, we know, but you should pull your head out of your ass when you talk on
    it so people can understand what you're saying. Just a suggestion,

    Happy to help

    Have a nice Christmas.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From THE BANDIT@21:1/5 to Guglielmo Marconi on Fri Dec 25 09:41:28 2020
    On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 at 11:31:14 a.m. UTC-5, Guglielmo Marconi wrote:
    In article <4a511808-b71c-4e8b...@googlegroups.com>, JeffGrant <jeffgr...@gmail.com> wrote:

    i own a cobra hhrt50
    Yes, we know, but you should pull your head out of your ass when you talk on it so people can understand what you're saying. Just a suggestion,

    Happy to help

    Have a nice Christmas.
    I AM HAVING A PROBLEM IN BARRIE AND NEED SOME HELP...CAN'T DEAL WITH CB RADIO ANYMORE.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)