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![]() "jakdedert" wrote in message .. . Scott Dorsey wrote: wrote: hi again, tnx for the replies..i did clean all wafer sws & pots, didn't clean main tuning cap..have bama prints for rx..will try voltage & resistance checks..full alignment sounds like a good idea..i have sig gen..1st & 2nd ifs would be difficult because sig gen calib not great..i dont think if alignment is my main prob..but will do all hf aligns..i'm glad to get back into tubes..its like restoring a classic car, but alot cheaper...hi hi. tnx agn..if u have any more ideas, pse email me. Before you touch the alignment, look for leaky paper caps. --scott That's kind of like looking for when Bush is lying...it's when his lips are moving. How do you know if they're leaking? They're the paper ones--they all leak...or will. jak You need a capacitance bridge to measure the dissipation factor. The by-pass and decoupling caps in the HQ-180 appear to be mostly disc ceramic caps. These have relatively low dissipation factor and are considered quite reliable but can go bad. Electrolytic caps, mostly used for power supply filter caps, at least in vacuum tube equipment, have relatively high dissipation factors when new but mainly fail when not used for some time. One plate of the capacitor is s chemical film which depends on the presense of a voltage to form so if not used for some time the thing simply stops being a capacitor. Paper caps can actually be pretty good. If reasonably well sealed they have long lives. The notorious Black Beauty caps, as used in Hammarlund SP-600-JX receivers, had a manufacturing problem which caused them to be short lived. Actually, they were intended and sold to be long lived high performance caps and are found in all sorts of very high quality equipment. I suspect that moisture getting into the caps is the main cause of failures but they started getting a bad reputation not long after they began to be used so it might be something else. Good paper type caps should have dissipation factors (at 1 khz) on the order of 0.01 or less and very low leakage types like ceramic, silver mica, and plastic (polyethylene, etc.) of perhaps 1/10th of this. Electrolytic caps will have dissipation factors much larger, however, they really should be measured with DC on them and some capacitor checkers allow for this. My bet about the HQ-180 is that the power supply filter caps are sick. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA |
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