I usually eat at one truck stop near my home once a month as their food is so good, but yes, I also "LOOK" at the display case, but have never had the urge to purchase one. Last time I used a CB was around 1979.
Appalachia CB at the Knoxville, TN PETRO (near the IH40 & IH24 split just west of town) has the deepest selection of higher quality radios on display I’ve seen in quite awhile (meaning “punch” on AM). CH 25. Also does install work (more of a rarity anymore).
I favor the PETRO chain for a variety of reasons, and this one is one of the better ones re location, amenities and personalities to be found, both on-air and at work.
The PETRO at Weatherford, TX (IH20, W of Ft Worth; almost second home), it features a decent CB shop with installs available.
Clays Radio (next to the San Antonio, TX PETRO) is king of the hill, IMO, in servicing both truckers and four-wheelers.
Expertise. (And a VERY big selection).
DTB Radio near the Carlisle, PA PETRO is another choice, but as a one-man shop he can get swamped. (Dave never has much on hand, but he’s a better tech than most).
BOB’s CB on IH80 just into Pennsylvania from Ohio is THE retail sales & service location to use as reason for a road trip (see website). No peer at depth of what’s on hand.
On line discussions of — and “pro” installations — can feature differences. It’s primarily bang for the buck.
No come backs (drains on time) is the driver for retail.
PETRO is the truck stop chain with the largest amount of available services and space surrounding any buildings.
By comparison, LOVES (with FAR more locations) is a glorified discount convenience store (not a neg). Can be much more difficult to enter/exit based on traffic.
Website for T/A & PETRO will note if a lessor has a space doing CB sales per location.
As you travel you MAY hear CB shops on-air advertising services. Not all are worth a stop. The ones in PETRO are
generally good bets (reputation; rig functions reliably; “how well” neither here nor there; do your own checks and tests).
CB shops were once common. Not any more. So the above is a way of looking at both How & Where one might find retail sales.
How = long term presence, and
Where = type of truck services on offer.
A PETRO (even more so than T/A) is a sort of
destination truck stop for a driver who may be spending his 34-hour reset at one location. Wants a sit-down restaurant plus showers, laundry and a big truck service shop.
The gasoline pumps are located away from the diesel fuel islands (separate entrances), but at a PETRO there can be quite a good hot lunch steam table at the diesel island center if you’re willing to maneuver thru big truck traffic. (Plate lunch; main building has fast food and/or big restaurant
always better than a Dennys type “restaurant”). Park where the employees have parked. (I’ll pull into the one at Shreveport, LA just for the boudin whether or not I need fuel; stops are never a casual decision).
But any CB shop will be in the main building. (At independent Truckstops it may be a portable building out back).
CB gear at chain Truckstops (proper) have almost zero variance in offerings. It’ll have to be an independent leasing space inside or nearby for depth of choice (expect that inventory is kept low; many radios on hand is a successful volume business).
.