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On Jul 8, 4:13*pm, (Scott Dorsey) wrote:
Engineer wrote: We acquired this receiver "new in box", unissued, clean and complete, with a test report dated "3/2/44" - a good start! *Unfortunately, the "new" Bendix dynamotor type DA-TA is seized up (tried it on a variable low voltage DC, the current spiked up, no motion, switched off fast!) It last ran in 1944 and for the last 65 years has been in storage. *My guess is the bearing grease has congealed and/or the brushes have stuck firmly on the commutators. *I just hope there is no rust between the armature and field core. *Is there any expertise, or any instructions, out there for servicing this unit? *If so, I would really appreciate a few pointers from knowlegeable people. *BTW, we'll be running the radio off external power supplies (app. 250 VDC B+ and 28 VDC for the heaters) but we'd still like the (disconnected) dynamotor to be servicable. The big Bendix dynamotors have ball bearings, the little ones have sleeve bearings. *Remove the two screws from each bell end and look inside. *You will soon see what is up. If they are sleeves or open ball bearings, squirt a little turbine oil into them and rock the thing back and forth. *Check the color of the oil coming out... if it's not rusty, don't worry about it. *Clean the open ball bearings out with any reasonable polar solvent (even WD-40 is probably okay) and repack with Mobil 1 Racing Grease or a high stability instrument grease. If they are sealed ball bearings, take 'em out and remove the shields and look inside. * Also, of course, open the brushes and check the brushes to make sure they aren't stuck. I have seen dynamotors that looks fine outside but were a solid clot of rust inside. *You'll know when you pull the ends and look inside. Another thing: the band switch is motor driven. *I've not checked this as we have not yet wired in the tuning unit, *but it crossed my mind that this motor, too, could be seized. *Can the band switch be operated manually (case open, of course), or, if motor OK, by a simple external switch (I can probably figure the latter out.) Yup. *I'd also check all the paper capacitors for leakage before applying actual power to the receiver. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. *C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." Scott, many thanks for your reply. I'll pull the ends off the dynamotor, take a look inside and proceed along the lines you suggest. As for the band-switch motor, I think I'll pull that assy. right out (carefully!) and free up the motor before working on the logic - this may give me an obvious manual band switch change. Re. paper caps: I've already put up to 200 VDC on the B+ (heaters not powered, very slow voltage rise), and the current draw is: -- at 100 VDC, 10 mA -- at 200 VDC, 26 mA I sensed that the current went down just a bit over the first hour of so, suggesting a electrolytic or two is forming. I think C77 and/or C78 near the B+ filter are electrolytic, plus another, but it's not marked on our unit - just looks like one, i.e. a greyish can with 3 tabs. I'll see if I can diagnose any DC leakage in the paper/mica caps in circuit using a DVM "creatively" - I don't want to pull any out yet as they are very solidly wired in ("military wrap" very close to component, plus solder.) Thanks again. Cheers, Roger |
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