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Richard
Having the dial up goes with the SP, hi hi. I did connect the 500 to the fil xfrmr pri. I was a GCA tech in he air force, worked as a radio and TV tech in high school and college and am a grad engr and have a bit of experience. And I 've had a few SP 600s but this is my first Super Pro 200. 1.25 to 40 Mcs, xtal filter, S-meter and 60 cps pwr supply and stamped Type O after all the patents. It's kind of a neat boatanchor that I've never played with before and for some unknown reason I keep on playing with it. I wish it had the full BCB but it's nice on CW & SWL. After being on all day I don't notice that much drift. It is just about right on on all the WWVs, but all you know about other frequencies is the first 2 digits. I don't need the manual as I have a copy of a copy of copy and the TM 11-866 but neither is really clear on the model number. I was offered $75 at the last hamfest and maybe I'll be lucky and get closer to the $150.00 I have in it or trade for some other beast. 73 Hank "Richard Knoppow" wrote in message m... "Henry Kolesnik" wrote in message ... Richard The volume decreased with the filament transformer so I need to open it up and see if someone made some mods. I downloaded the military manual. It seems to me that someone at Ham went nuts changing model numbers for very insignificant reasons. Note that the military type numbering was not done by Hammarlund. The Super-Pro went through three versions, the SP-100, the SP-200, the SP-400. The SP-100 was available in three versions with different frequency ranges, the SP-400 in two ranges. The SP-100 was also available with or without the crystal filter (I've never seen one without) but evidently the filter could be retrofitted. All three were also available in table or rack mount versions. There were at least two power supplies, a standard and a 50 hz supply. The 50hz supply will work on 60hz but not the other way. The last military versions came with solid state power supplies. There are some circuit differences between the different frequency ranges. The standard version and the aircraft frequency version (100 to 400khz) have series fed RF stages with some loading on the low frequency range and broadcast range of the standard version to broaden out the RF bandwidth. The high frequency version (1250khz to 40Mhz) has shunt-fed RF to keep the DC out of the RF coils. The coils have ferrite cores so removing the DC sharpens them up a bit, which is needed for a single conversion receiver operating a the higher part of the frequency range. A similar arrangement is used in the SP-400 and SP-400S (the last has the same 1250 to 40Mhz range). The three frequency range receivers had different military type numbers. The SP-210 is the same as the SP-200 but came with a 10" loudpeaker, there was also a SP-220, again the same chaissis with a 12" speaker. The standard version had an X on the end of the number (SP-210X) indicating it had the crystal filter, the high-frequency coverage version had an S on the model number as well as the X for crystal, vis: SP-210SX. The first versions, the SP-100 had glass multi-pin tubes with external sheilds, the SP-200 was redesigned to use metal octal tubes with do not need external shields. Otherwise the circuits are pretty much the same. The main virtue of the Super-Pro was the band switching arrangement. This is a very complex system of knife edge switches operated by cams, presumably to reduce lead length. National achieved something similar with the plug-in coils on the HRO and the sliding RF box on the NC-100, 101, and later NC-200 and 240 types. This may actually be a better arrangement. Hammarlund caught up by using a rotary turret on the SP-600 and Pro-310. But, except for Hallicrafters version of the Super-Pro, which also has a turret, I don't know of many receivers that used this good, but complex arrangement. One virtue of the Super-Pro is its excellent interstage shielding and lack of spurious responses, probably at least in part due to the RF stage arrangement. It is also a relatively low radiation reciever. Note that both the sliding coil method of adjusting the mutual inductance of the IF stages (and hence bandwidth) and the type of crystal filter circuit were Hammarlund exclusives. The IF bandwidth arrangement allows symmetrical expansion of the response curve where some other methods cause the bandwidth to expand only on one side. The crystal filter is arranged to vary the Q of the loading coil and, again, does not change the center frequency or gain as the bandwidth is changed, plus it uses a butterfly capacitor to adjust the phasing again so the center frequency does not vary with the notch position. This is a much more satisfactory system than the original Lamb filter used on National and Hallicrafters receivers until pretty late in the game. I have the civilian version of the instruction book and will post it to you via private e-mail if you can't find it. I am still on a dial-up and its pretty big but its yours if you desire. BTW, it has a long list of the patents used (mostly RCA and Hazeltine Labs) some of which are interesting to chase down. -- -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
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