TyPope
Well-known member
- First Name
- Ty
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2020
- Threads
- 33
- Messages
- 3,249
- Reaction score
- 4,980
- Location
- Chesapeake Beach, MD
- Vehicles
- '23 MYLR, FS Cyberbeast 280xx
- Occupation
- Current Operations for... an organization
Now that you mention it, I remember cutting the holes in the fender and mounting those antennae. You must be right about them being glass mounted.I'd wager that they were simply made to look like an OEM AM/FM antenna. If the AM/FM radio remained functional, it likely used an antenna in the glass, or similar, because connecting both it and the VHF transceiver would have toasted the car radio the first time the transceiver transmitted...for the same reason you got the RF burn. Those burns are no joke. At that time, the transmit power was likely no greater than 50 Watts, so you were at least somewhat lucky!
A buddy of mine was the lot boy at a local car dealership one summer in high school. They serviced police cars and used to have chases around the lot with the lights flashing...![]()
I'd get to drive the Mustangs from the radio shop up the hill to some other shop. Always liked driving them. New smell, party lights, pretty quick compared to my old '65.
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