View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Old July 11th 17, 02:19 PM posted to uk.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Rambo Rambo is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2011
Posts: 79
Default Dreaming on for a few more years about the RX :-)

On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 12:24:34 +0100, Brian Reay wrote:

On 11/07/17 11:50, Gareth's Downstairs Computer wrote:
Taking my cue from bandswitching in other designs,
and being motivated by the catacomb in the HRO
NC100X, I wonder if any have encountered bandswitching
by cam driven microswitches?

I presume that the contacts in microswitches must be
similar to those in small relays, and, being mechanical,
would not be subject to electrical failure.

What I envisage is that the most HF coils would be
mormally switched in by the microswitch closest
to the tuning cap, and then when the big cam (Big K? :-) )
slides along to activate that microswitch, the
next lower frequency coil takes over, and so on
and so forth.

Having had one failure by dropping the catacomb
mechanism on one corner, I'm sort of losing heart
at the prospect of making up 50 sliding contacts.


I remember the name "Tempatron" from way back in the 70's. They used
to make cam driven switches for fruit machines and the like.
And Begger me..they are still making them!!!

http://www.tempatron.co.uk/product.p...%20Timers.html

Learn from history. In the days of dual standard TVs (in the UK), some
makers had a large slide switch in the circuit board (this was the era
when even valve sets used PCBs with valve (tube) holders mounted on
PCBs. The switches were often operated by a bowden cable connected to
the VHF turret tuner. The switches had a huge number of contacts and
were infamous for failing- generally getting muck and gunge on them or
the contacts deforming. These were professionally produced items.

Using a similar approach with homemade contacts would seem doomed to
repeat a poor design concept. Learn from the errors of others.