Okay so yesterday I finally tackled tuning my CB radio after putting it off for weeks. My truck setup just wasn’t reaching far enough, you know? Decided to follow that beginner-friendly peak and tune method everyone talks about. Here’s exactly what went down.

Gathering My Gear
First I dug out my old CB from the glovebox – a basic Uniden model. Found my screwdrivers, a cheap multimeter from Harbor Freight, and this little plastic tuning tool that came with the radio. Almost grabbed pliers too but remembered that’s a no-no for delicate screws.
Cracking Open the Case
Unplugged everything and laid the radio on my kitchen table. Took out four Phillips screws on the back carefully so I wouldn’t strip them. Flipped it over and gently popped the faceplate off. Saw a bunch of circuit boards and wires – felt like disarming a bomb honestly!
Finding the Magic Screws
Started hunting for those tiny brass adjustment screws near the antenna port. Took me forever squinting under bad light until I spotted AM/FM MOD labelled ones. Almost poked the wrong component when my hand slipped. Pro tip: Use a headlamp if you got one.
The Actual Tuning Part
Plugged the multimeter leads into the radio’s test points like the guides showed. Turned it on and watched those numbers jump around. Slowly turned the AM MOD screw clockwise with my plastic tool while saying “c’mon c’mon” under my breath. Saw the voltage climb to exactly 1.8 volts and stopped dead. Did the same dance with the FM MOD screw until it hit 1.5 volts. Took three tries cause I kept overshooting it.
Putting Humpty Dumpty Back Together
Screwed the case back together praying I didn’t mess anything up. Hooked it back in my truck and keyed the mic. Channel 19 came alive with truckers clear as day! Drove around testing range and holy crap – got replies from over 5 miles out where I could barely get 2 before. Even got a “good signal buddy” from some guy in a Peterbilt.

What I Learned
- Plastic tuning tools are worth their weight in gold – metal WILL mess things up
- Turning screws too fast makes the multimeter numbers go crazy
- CB shops charge $100 for what takes 30 minutes with a $10 multimeter
- My wife now thinks I’m a radio wizard
Honestly thought I’d brick my radio but it worked slick. Just take it slow and don’t force anything. Next project: Figuring out why my external speaker crackles when I blast “Convoy.”