Searchboss: I had a friend who was a Ham and a Doctor and not long before he passed away, he called me and asked me to come to his house. He gave me an ICOM R-7000 Receiver (25Mhz to 1 Ghz) AM, SSB, and FM. He also gave me an old 23 channel Cobra SSB CB. Then he gave me a Variac (Variable transformer). Now that I got all the stuff he gave out of the way, I'll tell you about the items. I always wanted a VARIAC but never really had need of one. I've connected the ICOM R-7000 to an outside antenna and have monitored all sorts of stuff including 27 Mhz CB. I played around with the 23 channel COBRA CB a bit and the only thing I heard was a few loudmouth stations that only wanted to show off how much power they were running. So, as for me, I have CB capability but believe it will be next to useless when the SHTF. If I'm wrong, it's OK because I do have the capability to use CB if needed. Here's the problem with modern, latest and greatest CB's. They now can operate AM, SSB, and FM. Most of the new ones only do AM and FM and the word on the street is that the Upper channels around 30 to 40 is where the FMer's will be and the AMer's will be below channel 30. The SSBer's pretty much were stuck at Channel 16 upper side band. I didn't need the radios that my friend gave me because my old ICOM IC-718 is opened up and can operate AM and SSB on pretty much anywhere that it can hear. The only good thing about CB radios is that they are built to operate in that narrow band and so their receivers are far superior to radios that can operate on multiple bands. If I find than I need CB during a SHTF situation, I'll probably hook up the COBRA first to see if it operates superior to my ICOM 718. It all goes back to the old saying, "It's better to have it and not need it that to need it and not have it." I live about 2 miles from a huge truckstop and they sell CB's there. So far, I've mostly seen COBRA's and PRESIDENT's for sale there. 99% of them are AM only. When folks start needing COMS, they'll probably just dig out there old AM only CB's and that's where the bulk of radio traffic will be.