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![]() "ablebravo" wrote in message ups.com... this is the first more complex (than s38s) halli have i tried to repair. as received, the set. set played, but w/out sensitivity or vol. recapped (not micas) and tested all tubes, replacing as needed. checked resistors, and replaced a few. set also had severe crackling which matched 'short in a tuning cap' as described in marcus and levy. i replaced the tuning condensor, due to remaining crackles i simply couldn't get out w/cleaning. crackles went away w/partswap and set appeared to align well -- used scope across output to voice coil. got good volume and nice waves as i went thru the IF and the band steps. for IF the sig gen was connected to the center of the gang, the middle of 3 posts on the top of it, w/the ground to the chassis and the gang fully open. radio plays well on band 3 -- good vol on strong station, many stations w/short wire. picks up similarly on band 2 down to about 4 mhz. bc is silent except for what sounds like a couple of spots that 'want to be' stations. very faint voice heard in one spot. band 4 seems to be similar. a quick reattach of sig gen, and good tones heard all bands at align freq for those bands, and good IF tone. bandswitch was checked and cleaned. seems to be making good contact w/clean click/pop as changed w/set on. a little puzzled where to look because of this. docs say make sure the image freq is out of the way of oscillator freq for bands. i don't quite understand what this means, or how to be sure they aren't colliding, but i think i may have misaligned the base IF? maybe aligned with an image of it? have noticed when aligning other sets, you can find several positions that ring w/the tone, but only one that rings best. is this the result of getting the echo instead of the original? care was taken on the rf aligns to find thru most of the adj range for the best response. but did not try moving the if's radically. ab This last means to make sure the local oscillator is on the correct side of the signal, that is, make sure you are not peaking up the image of the desired signal. This is most likely on the top band (band 4) since image suppression will probably be adequate to prevent it on the lower bands. The oscillator of the S-40 and S-40-A is above the signal frequency on bands 1,2,and 3, and below it on band 4. If you have the oscillator on the wrong side of the signal the sensitivity will be low and the frequency calibration off. You can measure the oscillator frequency with another radio with similar frequency range, just pick up its radiation on the the receiver. You don't need anyhing too accurate, just enough to tell within 455khz of where the oscillator is. This problem is very unlikely on the BC band but might well be the problem on band 4. Another receiver will also tell you if the oscillator is weak or cutting out at some points on the band. Since you know the IF stages work OK the problem is isolated to the RF or Mixer stages. You can probably check the mixer by injecting a signal directly into it. Probably a wire wound around the tube (with shield off) a few times will get enough signal into it. It won't be as sensitive as normal but should give you some response. If this seems to work OK the problem is in the RF amp. Someone suggested one or more antenna primary coils may be open. This is possible and does not have to be damage from lightning. Its easy to check, just put an ohm meter across the two antenna terminals on the back of the set (with the ground link open) and measure the resistance. It will vary with the band but should be pretty low for all. If the coil is open you will get an open circuit indication on the ohm meter. Sometimes all that happens is that the solder connections at the ends of the coil have opened up. Often just heating them with a little extra solder will fix the coil. Lightning damage is usually pretty extreme and easy to spot. It sounds like you have a service manual. You might check the manuals available on the BAMA site, there are several covering the S-40 and S-40A. While there are differences the two are enough alike so that the rather complete technical manual for the S-40 may be of some help. I would download everything there that pertains to this receiver, there may be a hint in one that is missed in the others. BTW, I am surprized that it was necessary to replace the tuning capacitor. Variable capacitors are usually noisy due to dirt between the plates or intermittant ground connections to the rotor. Lubricating the bearings with a tuner lubricant may also help. Make sure the replacement capacitor isn't going open at some points. See if any of this helps. You can also contact me via e-mail if you want. The first time you will get a spam blocker message. I will also follow this thread in this group and respond here if you prefer. Good luck in restoring this thing, its a neat little receiver. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA |
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