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Old April 15th 05, 03:16 AM
BDK
 
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In article ,
says...

I have an HQ180 that was owned by an extremely heavy smoker. The entire
radio was yellow/brown from smoke. Clean up was not all that bad and it has
had no problems since I have owned it which is now going on 13 years.

"John Reed" wrote in message
...
There's a lot more to what cigarette smoke does to a receiver than smell.
It gets into every control, key and contact. I bought an NRD-525 that

must
have been exposed to smoke. Several of the keys won't make contact, all

the
variable resistors are noisy and it's just about unusable. About the only
thing that can be done is to replace the bad resistors and switches and
clean all the contacts. Not a small job.

John Reed

Dear Colin,

If the seller is local to you, you can go over to his house and try the
radio for yourself. If the radio was well-taken-care-of, there should
be no problems.

Cigarette smoke does not cause any real damage to radios. The tobacco
odor will dissipate over several weeks and should be totally gone in a
year or less. If you're really concerned about the odor, leave the
radio outside for a few hours each day (in nice weather only!). That
should accelerate the dissipation of the odor.

Best,

Joe







I had a yaesu 7700 about 15 years ago that I bought at a hamfest. It
worked fine, but stunk really bad. It seemed like it was a slightly
different color than any other 7700 I had seen. I didn't realize until I
started cleaning it up, that it was just the residue of the dead
previous owners 3 pack a day habit that made it that odd "orange-gray"
color. I ended up taking it almost completely apart and putting the case
into the dishwasher. It came out looking great, and I had no problems
with it except the speaker puked out just before I sold it.

BDK