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On Oct 17, 7:38 pm, "COLIN LAMB" wrote:
And, Phil's website is as good and concise as it gets about replacing capacitors. Seehttp://antiqueradio.org/recap.htm Even if you have been doing it for years, you will appreciate Phil's nice writing style and useful information. And, a big fat A for taking the time to help spread his wisdom, learned from years of experience. Even after years of repairing radios, we learn that we can do it better. A few years ago I was going to replace a paper cap in a 17 tube receiver. I do them one at a time. I clipped the old one out, got a phone call and dinner call and shut the soldering iron off and left. I was not able to return to the work for about a month. By then, I knew there was a capacitor out - but I had clipped the old leads off and it took me an hour of tracing and schematic reading before I could determine where the missing capacitor was. Now, I am more methodical and make notes before I clip the capacitor. A notebook and pencil are always nearby to document before I start work. Life has been much simpler since then. And, it really is a good idea to test the radio after a maximum number of changes. Colin K7FM Colin has it right. I had a similar experience. Ever since, I keep a digital camera close and take close-up pictures as the work progresses. I can always check my work, and I have a set of pictures afterwards to show off. I also keep a scratch copy of the radio manual's component list and schematic that I mark up during the job. When I hand the radio over to the owner, I can show him exactly what I did to restore the radio. Gary WA7MLK |
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