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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years and
it's always sounded great on the FM/VHF band until recently. Now I'm finding it increasingly difficult to tune-in properly, even with strong stations. It just sounds a bit scratchy like it's off-frequency slightly. The usual leeway I got with tuning a station has gone; it has to be dead- on yet it's still not quite right. Speech can often sound totally fine, but when there's a musical interlude the problem suddenly becomes apparent again. Is this symptomatic of it needing a re-alignment? I can't think what else could be causing it, but since I've never experienced such a problem before, I'm really pretty much in the dark here. Any ideas? -- This message may be freely reproduced without limit or charge only via the Usenet protocol. Reproduction in whole or part through other protocols, whether for profit or not, is conditional upon a charge of GBP10.00 per reproduction. Publication in this manner via non-Usenet protocols constitutes acceptance of this condition. |
#2
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On 12/3/2017 6:54 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years Dried out aluminum electrolytic capacitors. -- Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi http://www.foxsmercantile.com |
#3
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On 03/12/2017 12:54, Cursitor Doom wrote:
I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years and it's always sounded great on the FM/VHF band until recently. Now I'm finding it increasingly difficult to tune-in properly, even with strong stations. It just sounds a bit scratchy like it's off-frequency slightly. The usual leeway I got with tuning a station has gone; it has to be dead- on yet it's still not quite right. Speech can often sound totally fine, but when there's a musical interlude the problem suddenly becomes apparent again. Is this symptomatic of it needing a re-alignment? I can't think what else could be causing it, but since I've never experienced such a problem before, I'm really pretty much in the dark here. Any ideas? If you do start twiddling IF Tx cores , mark the angle and measure the depth of each, making up a little nut and screw "depth gauge" and only try 1 at a time , so you can get back to where you started from. Another consideration, any ceramic resonator filters perhaps not 40 years back, the silver inside can migrate over the resonator edges and make them go ohmic, losing selectivity |
#4
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On Sunday, 3 December 2017 14:41:50 UTC, N_Cook wrote:
On 03/12/2017 12:54, Cursitor Doom wrote: I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years and it's always sounded great on the FM/VHF band until recently. Now I'm finding it increasingly difficult to tune-in properly, even with strong stations. It just sounds a bit scratchy like it's off-frequency slightly. The usual leeway I got with tuning a station has gone; it has to be dead- on yet it's still not quite right. Speech can often sound totally fine, but when there's a musical interlude the problem suddenly becomes apparent again. Is this symptomatic of it needing a re-alignment? I can't think what else could be causing it, but since I've never experienced such a problem before, I'm really pretty much in the dark here. Any ideas? If you do start twiddling IF Tx cores , mark the angle and measure the depth of each, making up a little nut and screw "depth gauge" and only try 1 at a time , so you can get back to where you started from. Another consideration, any ceramic resonator filters perhaps not 40 years back, the silver inside can migrate over the resonator edges and make them go ohmic, losing selectivity SAW filters got into consumer goods in the 80s. It'll be cans with slugs. the following is more from reading than experience... Before doing any twiddling you really need to know the set up technique, it was not as simplistic as twiddle for best volume/clarity. AIUI the slugs were stagger tuned to get the best shaped response, fail to follow that method and you'll end up with really crap audio frequency response for AM, for FM I presume lousy signal capture & distortion. NT |
#5
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On Sun, 03 Dec 2017 07:01:42 -0600, Foxs Mercantile wrote:
On 12/3/2017 6:54 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote: I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years Time to buy a new one then! Dried out aluminum electrolytic capacitors. ??? |
#6
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On Sunday, December 3, 2017 at 8:01:47 AM UTC-5, Foxs Mercantile wrote:
On 12/3/2017 6:54 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote: I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years Dried out aluminum electrolytic capacitors. -- Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi http://www.foxsmercantile.com What he wrote - AND BEFORE screwing around with slugs filters and/or any other 'adjustables" in the radio - unless you really do want to split a slug, break something and utterly destroy it. Either the caps are bad, or they are bad after 40 years, or they are bad out of sheer cussedness. And as there are no other variables that would explain the increasing deafness of the radio, start with the obvious (and necessary) before risking anything else. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#8
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On 12/3/2017 3:59 PM, wrote:
On Sunday, December 3, 2017 at 8:01:47 AM UTC-5, Foxs Mercantile wrote: On 12/3/2017 6:54 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote: I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years Dried out aluminum electrolytic capacitors. -- Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi http://www.foxsmercantile.com What he wrote - AND BEFORE screwing around with slugs filters and/or any other 'adjustables" in the radio - unless you really do want to split a slug, break something and utterly destroy it. Either the caps are bad, or they are bad after 40 years, or they are bad out of sheer cussedness. And as there are no other variables that would explain the increasing deafness of the radio, start with the obvious (and necessary) before risking anything else. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA I have to disagree about always blaming caps. 90 % of the electrolytic caps that I remove when a customer wants them all replaced are just fine, unless they are near a heat source. SOME brands and series of caps are suspect, but many are just fine. Another possibility for this radio is a bad RF amp transistor or something similar elsewhere. For example, in many old tuners you are more likely to find bad LM703 IF IC's than a bad cap, especially if the IC is the dome-topped variety, the metal cans are much better. Bad soldering or dirty tuning cap grounds are also common issues. Regards, Tim |
#9
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On 12/3/2017 3:59 PM, wrote:
On Sunday, December 3, 2017 at 8:01:47 AM UTC-5, Foxs Mercantile wrote: On 12/3/2017 6:54 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote: I've had this great old classic radio for the best part of 40 years Dried out aluminum electrolytic capacitors. -- Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi http://www.foxsmercantile.com What he wrote - AND BEFORE screwing around with slugs filters and/or any other 'adjustables" in the radio - unless you really do want to split a slug, break something and utterly destroy it. Either the caps are bad, or they are bad after 40 years, or they are bad out of sheer cussedness. And as there are no other variables that would explain the increasing deafness of the radio, start with the obvious (and necessary) before risking anything else. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA I have to disagree about always blaming caps. 90 % of the electrolytic caps that I remove when a customer wants them all replaced are just fine, unless they are near a heat source. SOME brands and series of caps are suspect, but many are just fine. Another possibility for this radio is a bad RF amp transistor or something similar elsewhere. For example, in many old tuners you are more likely to find bad LM703 IF IC's than a bad cap, especially if the IC is the dome-topped variety, the metal cans are much better. Bad soldering or dirty tuning cap grounds are also common issues. Regards, Tim |
#10
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On Sunday, 3 December 2017 23:50:37 UTC, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Sun, 03 Dec 2017 12:59:49 -0800, wrote: On Sunday, December 3, 2017 at 8:01:47 AM UTC-5, Foxs Mercantile wrote: Dried out aluminum electrolytic capacitors. What he wrote - AND BEFORE screwing around with slugs filters and/or any other 'adjustables" in the radio - unless you really do want to split a slug, break something and utterly destroy it. Either the caps are bad, or they are bad after 40 years, or they are bad out of sheer cussedness. And as there are no other variables that would explain the increasing deafness of the radio, start with the obvious (and necessary) before risking anything else. Well, I can't argue with that philosophy; I'm all for trying the simple things first. I can't remember the last time I ran this radio off a battery, but I'll get one in the morning and try powering it up with that. I'm not sure how dried electrolytics could explain the symptoms I'm getting but am happy to at least eliminate that possibility first and obviously that does not eliminate the possibility. |
#11
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On Sunday, December 3, 2017 at 10:10:47 PM UTC-5, Tim Schwartz wrote:
I have to disagree about always blaming caps. 90 % of the electrolytic caps that I remove when a customer wants them all replaced are just fine, unless they are near a heat source. SOME brands and series of caps are suspect, but many are just fine. Tim Tim: Likely the caps in this beast are Frako, even if re-branded. May as well write FlakO. So, at the very least they are suspect as you suggest. And if he has been running it off mains power, there may well be some heat involved. Furthermore, this is a German Radio - meaning that Grundig never used one part where three-or-more would do better. Dealing with the caps - a necessary exercise in any case - may cure the problem. At worst, the effort is not wasted. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, P |
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