"Lancer" wrote in message
...
On 15 Feb 2005 11:42:41 -0800, "No I Am Not Him"
wrote:
Chad Wahls wrote:
"Dave Hall" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 09:57:06 -0500, Vinnie S.
wrote:
While I solved one problem on SSB, another continues.
I am still having that "carrier" problem on SSB. For some reason,
as soon
as
I speak into the mic, the radio holds power, as if it were on AM.
The TX
meter
on the radio shows this, and the SWR/power meter shows this. The
power is
not
fluctuating with modulation. The ALC was not cranked up. The power
is not
high,
about 20 watts peak. Like I said, it seems to do this as soon
as I speak into the mic. Even a subtle noise will send it to max,
and stay
there. Changed mics, and have the same problem.
So then I tried this.
I took this radio and put it in my car (it's my only radio). When I
connect it
directly to the Wilson 1000 barefoot, I get the same problem on
SSB.
However,
when I go thru the amp, it works perfectly, no power unless I
modulate.
This is
also true if the amp is turned on or off. It appears to be an
impedance
mismatch. Since the amp input is a perfect match, the problem goes
away,
whether
or not the amp power is on or off. Here is the kicker. The SWR on
my home
antenna is about 1.3-1.5 across the band.
The final oscillation is most definitely related to output load
impedance. When I first stumbled onto this problem (In some older
dual
final Galaxy radios), the problem would never show up on the bench
when I used my dummy load. It also didn't show on my base antenna.
But
the problem would happen on the customer's antenna. I managed to
force
the problem on my antenna by using a tuner and de-tuning the match
until the oscillation occurred.
The cover of the radio acts like a capacitor, and it's very
sensitive
to it.
Did you see any bottom mounted caps connected to the final
transistor? If not then you might have to mount a piece of grounded
shield plate over the final or experiment with bypass caps until
you
kill the oscillation. But try setting the bias first. If I
remember
right, the bias for the final should be set at somewhere in the 30
-
40 mA range. I'll check the manual and give you the exact value.
Dave
"Sandbagger"
I kinda figured oscillation also. Bad bias can cause it. Make sure
that's
correct. See if any one had hinkeyed around in there, Check serial
numbers, did these not use 2 different finals at different times?
When
changing finals did they change drive components? Unfortunately I do
not
have a schematic here to look around. Did anyone do any "coil
spreading"?
Chad
LOL "coil spreading". See this is exatcly what I was talking about.
Someone is ALWAYS inside a keyclown radio to try and get it to do more
power, more channels. The result is all kinds of problems. You would
never have these problems if you ran legal gear.
Thats why they moved the capacitors to the bottom of the radio, more
room to spread the coils.
Good one! First laugh I've had here in a while!
Chad
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