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#1
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Have recently purchased a SP-600 JX-17 in "working/as is" condition.
the good.....it works on the lower 3 band ranges. The bad, it is "as is" aka nothing (no signals, nouise, static, etc) at all on the higher 3 band ranges. Am interested in any initial troubleshooting ideas folks may have. Thanks in advance for the assistance - winter is coming and I'll need the tube heat! |
#2
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![]() "wn6yqs" wrote in message ... Have recently purchased a SP-600 JX-17 in "working/as is" condition. the good.....it works on the lower 3 band ranges. The bad, it is "as is" aka nothing (no signals, nouise, static, etc) at all on the higher 3 band ranges. Am interested in any initial troubleshooting ideas folks may have. Thanks in advance for the assistance - winter is coming and I'll need the tube heat! The problem is that the second conversion stage is not working for some reason. The first thing to look at is the position of the IFO switch on the front panel, this is the left hand red knob. If its in EXT the set will not work on the top three bands. The JX-17 version of the SP-600 differs little from other models but some of the differences are important. This receiver was meant to operate in groups of two or three in space diversity systems. This is simply a way of improving radio circuit performance by combining the signals from two or three spaced antennas since the signal variation due to certain kinds of fading will be different for each. Diversity combiners may need to have access to various internal signals from the receivers connected to them. The SP-600-JX was designed to fit these needs and obviate the need to modify the standard models. To operate as a stand-alone receiver the HFO switch must be set at VAR, and the IFO and BFO/AVC switches set for internal. There is a great deal of information available for the SP-600 on the web. Complete handbooks and military repair manuals can be found. See for instance: http://www.jamminpower.com and of course the BAMA site: http://bama.sbc.edu/ For the last use the alternative site for downloading, its very much faster. Also see: http://www.hammarlund.info/ The SP-600 is a very fine receiver. I have come to the conclusion that there are a great many of them which "work" but are really pretty sick. While they are fairly easy to work on (other than being very heavy) one needs some special knowledge to get them up to their capability. A word of caution: NEVER BEND TUNING CAPACITOR PLATES they should be straight and parallel. If the frequench calibration is off it _can_ be from a misalignment of the capacitor stators and rotors but this is NEVER cured by plate bending. Many SP-600s were made using the notorious Sprague Black Beauty capacitors. While these were made and sold to be extra-reliable high performance units they had manufacturing problems and proved to be very unreliable. It is common practice to replace _all_ of them (I think its 48) in the receiver. Many military radios will have modified with ceramic caps which are very reliable and long lived. There are a lot of SP-600 fans here so I think you will be able to get answers to most of your questions. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
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