Sorry to hijack the thread, but CB radios are essential for anyone that goes into the mountains around here during the week.
Why? Because in the Pacific Northwest, logging and timber harvesting is one of the largest industries and pretty much anywhere you go in the mountains, there will be log trucks coming down the mountain with a load of logs, or headed back up to get a load of logs. And they will be going as fast as they can in order to get the maximum number of loads in for the day.
We are talking 80k lbs. of semi barreling down a winding dirt road with nothing but blind corners and taking up most of the narrow road.
This is one of the wider and better roads in the mountains around here...
I came around the corner at about 30mph and barely had enough room to stop. Now imagine a logging truck coming around the next corner at 35mph and taking up almost the entire road.
You will not win against this...
So, how does a CB radio become essential?
Because if you have ever gone onto a mountain road in this part of the US, you will see something spray-painted on a tree that says something like "CB 7" or "CB 3". That is telling you what channel to turn your CB radio to.
Then, every mile, you will see a number spray painted on a tree.
That is the mile marker for that road. So, as you drive up the road, you know roughly where you are. This is where the CB radio comes into play. The log truck drivers are coming down the mountain and will announce on their CBs, set to the specific channel for that road, what mile marker they just passed. That lets another log truck coming up the road know that they need to find a spot to pull over to let the other truck go by. It also lets other vehicles on that road know that they need to slow down and pull over.
For example, if I am in my pickup and took a Wednesday off to go huckleberry picking in the woods, I turn onto a road heading into the woods and see "CB 4" spray -painted onto a tree trunk immediately after turning onto the new road, I would then turn on my CB radio and tune it to channel 4. I would then pay attention to the mile markers as I drove, and should be announcing my position every mile. For instance, since I turned off the main road, and am now headed "up" into the mountains, I would say this when passing by a tree with a 3 painted on it... "Red Ram pickup headed up at mile 3". That would let anyone else coming down that road know where I am and to pull over or slow down.
If I then heard a few moments later... "Log truck coming down at mile 4", then I would know that I have to find a safe spot to pull over ASAP to let the truck go by. The driver of that truck would also be slowing down and looking for a wide spot.
Just last week, I was headed up a road to go huckleberry picking and nearly got into a head-on collision with some moron in a Subaru going too fast on a narrow mountain road with no CB to let others know where they were. Old guys like me who grew up in these mountains know the importance of CB radios. Not many of us educated and experienced folks left yet all of the log trucks still have them and use them daily.
So that is why a CB Radio is essential in this part of the US.
When I lived in AZ, I remember getting stuck in traffic on the I-17 in my Mustang. Traffic was backed up for miles. I decided to walk to the semi behind me and ask what he has heard on his CB regarding what is going on. When I got to the truck, the driver was a Sikh with a turban and said in very broken English that he did not have a CB radio and only listened to Sirius XM. Weird.
So I walked the other way to the semi a couple of vehicles in front of me hoping that the driver would have a CB radio and had heard what was going on. Nope, that truck driver was Serbian and he also managed to communicate through broken English that he had no CB radio and only listened to Sirius XM.
That was an eye-opener as to how much things have changed the past twenty years in America. And it also validates previous posters responses saying that a CB is nearly useless in most of America in terms of gathering important information as so many trucking jobs are being filled by immigrants who barely speak the language and barely can drive a truck.