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What to do with Sears SSB 934.36772600 and Roadtalker CM-4700S

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Kazzy

Newbie
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Apr 19, 2018
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Hello everyone,

I recently dug up these two radios in storage and plugged them in; they still turn on.

I don't have the equipment to test them properly.

I want to sell them to get them out of the way but have no idea how to even calculate their value.

What do you think they are worth?

Here are the pictures: https://imgur.com/a/Of3IFEB

Obviously they could use some TLC.

Thank you for your time.
 

spongella

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Feb 21, 2014
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948
Location
W. NJ
Sears radios come up for auction on EBay. Do a search on Ebay and find out what they sold for by clicking on "Sold Listings."
 

iMONITOR

Silent Key
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Joined
Sep 20, 2006
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11,156
Location
S.E. Michigan
I doubt they're worth much at all. They are old obsolete 23 channel technology. They were nothing special when new. Looking at the exterior corrosion, I imagine the insides aren't much better. Corroded solder connections, switches, potentiometers, circuit boards, leaking capacitors, the list goes on.

You can buy a today's technology 40 channel SSB equivalent for about $125 brand new!
 

spongella

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kf4eyr is right.

In the pre-40-channel CB era, channel 16 was the where SSB ops gathered. Did not know that this still is used for SSB though.

Back in the 70's a 23 channel SSB CB would cost around $300 as I had a Midland SSB, bought at a long-gone Forbee's Electronics, Yonkers, NY.
 

Cepheid

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Apr 8, 2018
Messages
31
Location
Taylorsville NC
I hate to be the bearer of bad news but I think if you put them on E-bay it would cost more to ship these units than they are worth. Your post did bring back fond memories of my SSB radio days (I thought it was super cool back then)
 

Fast1eddie

Member
Joined
Mar 4, 2004
Messages
628
Location
Crafton Pennsylvania
The Sears Roadtalkers were good radios! I had the plain jane AM model...Came from the factory with low (2.5ish watts) output, I was able to change some components and got it to where it should be and a tad more, worked very well for me. I always liked the SSB version, with some work it would sing again. Old radio tech here and lots of life left in the older radios.

Take it to Goodwill or a flea market. If you were local to Pittsburgh, I'd give you (only) a few bucks for it.
 

prcguy

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Jun 30, 2006
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So Cal - Richardson, TX - Tewksbury, MA
In the late 1970s when I worked at a popular CB/stereo shop in CO, once a year we would gather up all the radios in the repair shop that were abandoned or could not be fixed, lined them up on the dumpster in the central back hallway for the strip mall we were in, then shot them all with an AR-15. It was great fun and this is what I would recommend for the Sears Road Talker in question here. You will probably get way more pleasure doing this than what you will receive on Ebay for the unit.
 

Peerlessk

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Joined
Sep 1, 2013
Messages
380
Location
Lima NY
I’ve have many (cough) cbs kicking around . I’m a radio hoarder . If anything and you have room . Maybe display them . They make good conversation pieces if you have friends that share the interest . No one really wants the older cbs . They want digital and the ones with scanners built in , unfortunately.
 
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Messages
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I also have a few old radios around. Some work, some don't. The funny thing is, I do not even own a new radio. I have vintage Cobra and Radio Shack models that I actually use, and I have some others I have picked up cheap or free that either serve as spares or display pieces. Never throw anything vintage away. Ever. Save them for the next hoarder! :D
 

PACNWDude

Member
Joined
Oct 15, 2012
Messages
1,347
A few months back I bought a Sears Roadtalker40 CB radio at a thrift store. It was well used, but in its original box, with a Radio Shack SWR meter, cables for power and meter, and a broken magnet mount antenna. This was for $15.00. Brought it home, used a baking sheat and Cobra magnet mount antenna,and the radio worked perfectly.
Sadly, even the 40 channel radios are not worth much, but are great radios. Heavy, well made and no corrosion in mine, just well used electronic components. Luckily no leaking caps, but still able to make some local contacts a few miles away.
May be worth giving to someone locally that may want to monitor channel 9 or local traffic.
 
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