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RS DX-392 BFO centering adjustment?
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March 6th 04, 12:40 PM
Larry W4CSC
Posts: n/a
On 06 Mar 2004 05:24:11 GMT,
(WShoots1) wrote:
The BFO on my 392 is just a little off, so I just marked on its dial where zero
is and then offset the knob either way for SSB (or CW). SSB remained in range
on the "short" side of the BFO range.
To zero beat WWV on mine, you have to turn the receiver to 10.003 and
the BFO nearly full CCW. That's a wee bit too far off for fun.
I agree the receiver is stable. I used it on fax. I tried taping the fax, but
there's a slight difference in motor speed between record and play, which
causes thefax display to skew. I never got around to poking inside and
correcting or changing one of the speeds.
On the boat, I have HF-FAX software from Germany on a Dell Latitude
notebook also used for navigation. Even live, HF-FAX skews the
display to the right as the picture loads. It's usable but the
program seems to free-run, not listen to the sync pulses on each line.
I wish it used the sync pulse to make it straight.
Those AAs below the Ds also save the memory and power the control circuits.
When they're dead, nothing happens.
Those AAs were the reason it was $3...(c; The display was blank and
wouldn't show, so the thrift shop just sold it off broken. I took a
chance, as I do a lot in thrift shops.
My greatest find was a 1939 Motorola 41D battery portable AM radio in
the same shop. I paid $20 for it, as is. Every part in it is
ORIGINAL, even the tubes! It's 4 tubes now run on a pair of alkaline
D cells for filaments and eleven 9V alkaline batteries clipped
end-to-end for B+. From Charleston, SC, I can hear Central American
AM stations on its big open loop antenna around the entire back of its
leatherette-covered wooden case.
Because there are no more radio station on the AM hate radio band, I
have an Archos Studio 20 20GB hard drive MP3 player driving a little
computer speaker amp that runs off 4 AA Ni-MH batteries inside the
battery compartment, connected to the radio's original 4" speaker.
Load the Archos with old time radio shows from the 1930-40 era and
watch the eyes of the old folks who hear it playing music and radio
shows that were playing on it when it was a "new radio" in 1939.
Glenn Miller and Tommy Dorsey sound better played on a real
radio...(c;
Bill, K5BY
Larry W4CSC
POWER is our friend!
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