Continued - I mean, if you observe the video in detail, you can even hear the noise subsiding momentarily in the video, during a point in time where the noise blanker is actually turned OFF. At that point, you momentarily can hear the same station (with the same signal strength) that can be heard crystal clear when the noise blanker is ON. That is proof that the NB switch is not some kind of gimmick that desensitizes the receiver like you suggested, it is a REAL SSB noise blanker.
No, you are completely wrong. This radio has separate circuits for the AM ANL and the SSB noise blanker. The AM ANL is basically an extra diode in the AM detector creating an extra treshold for noise (line the ANLs on all Cb radios), the SSB NL is a circuit where a parallel wide-band path in the RF stage (followed by an artificial delay) drives a transistor switch that turns off the main RF receiver path monentarily every time a noie spike happens. This is NOT an RF gain, it's a real blanker.
No, it is in original condition. Keep in mind that in stock condition, the HygainV model 2975 already has 3 bands of 40 channels each, 4 modulation modes including FM, as well as 25 watts PEP output power. So there was absolutely no need to do any mods to it. Cheers!
@VK4LA Yeah i It's a good radio. Made by the Cybernet company in Japan, in the late seventies. Cybernet made a whole bunch of radios for other companies as well like Ham International, Lafayette, Midland, Hycom, Senfor, Amroh, J.C Penney and so on. Their main competitor was Uniden. The latter is still in the business of CB radios, Cybernet went belly-up, or maybe they just stopped making CB radios, not sure.
My old Hy-gain 5 was a 23 channel unit, I even found a slider for it. Good luck and don't ever sell that c-b.
slingslingbinks 4 months ago
Continued - I mean, if you observe the video in detail, you can even hear the noise subsiding momentarily in the video, during a point in time where the noise blanker is actually turned OFF. At that point, you momentarily can hear the same station (with the same signal strength) that can be heard crystal clear when the noise blanker is ON. That is proof that the NB switch is not some kind of gimmick that desensitizes the receiver like you suggested, it is a REAL SSB noise blanker.
coheher 6 months ago
No, you are completely wrong. This radio has separate circuits for the AM ANL and the SSB noise blanker. The AM ANL is basically an extra diode in the AM detector creating an extra treshold for noise (line the ANLs on all Cb radios), the SSB NL is a circuit where a parallel wide-band path in the RF stage (followed by an artificial delay) drives a transistor switch that turns off the main RF receiver path monentarily every time a noie spike happens. This is NOT an RF gain, it's a real blanker.
coheher 6 months ago
No, it is in original condition. Keep in mind that in stock condition, the HygainV model 2975 already has 3 bands of 40 channels each, 4 modulation modes including FM, as well as 25 watts PEP output power. So there was absolutely no need to do any mods to it. Cheers!
coheher 1 year ago
So did you modify this radio?
sboxjunk 1 year ago
i like the old cb radio...had something similar back in early 1980's in Australia
VK4LA 1 year ago
@VK4LA Yeah i It's a good radio. Made by the Cybernet company in Japan, in the late seventies. Cybernet made a whole bunch of radios for other companies as well like Ham International, Lafayette, Midland, Hycom, Senfor, Amroh, J.C Penney and so on. Their main competitor was Uniden. The latter is still in the business of CB radios, Cybernet went belly-up, or maybe they just stopped making CB radios, not sure.
coheher 1 year ago