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If you look at the capacitor inside the IF can, the primary and the
secondary has very little insulation or separation between the primary to secondary capacitor plates. There is a great DC potential from the plate connected primary to the grid connected secondary. The potential is higher in your Hallicrafters than the usual AA5. That is where the silver migration or contamination occurs (from primary to secondary). Some times scraping the migrated silver or tarnish off will solve the problem. But I bet it would be only temporary. I have fixed plenty of these "Thunder storm in a can" problems. http://www.radiomuseum.org/forum/if_...er_repair.html http://www.ppinyot.com/if_transformers.htm And as others have said, discrete component failure (non IF cans) can cause this symptom as well. Good Luck, Paul P. |
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