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Ralph Mowery wrote:
From what I have read, there does seem to be lot of mods to the audio stages. Ihave not spent too much time with this unit so far. Got a couple of crystals from a friend this morning sowas able to load it on 40 meters into a dummy load. Cw seemed ok,but no audio. Driving it with a audio signal generator I could get a slight ammount of audio out,but it took about 5 volts into the mic. Way too much. Found the plate and screen resistors open on the 1st audio amp. Replaced them and getting over 100 % when using a D104 mic if I turn the audio all the way open. I am showing about 10% hum on the Viking on my ifr 1200s and can hear it somewhat on a receiver in the other room. It is that way in CW or Phone. Most of the capacitors have been replaced, but could be bad. If plate and screen resistors failed, I'd replace the tube and see what happens, because likely it was the tube that caused them to fail. Check the supplies with a scope. If you see hum, you have decoupling cap issues. If you don't, then it's something else. You can also try pulling the first audio tube. Got a hum? If so, pull the second audio tube. Still a hum? Pull the finals from the audio deck. Still humming? You can track it down stage by stage... and it may well be in the RF stages and not the audio stages. Maybe a HK leakage in one of the tubes. Ihave some 6AU6, but not any 6AQ5 tubes. That 6AQ5 was good for around 5 watts of audio and used in many receivers as the output. When the 6AQ5 develops a heater-cathode short, which they are prone to doing, they usually hum SO LOUD that you won't have any usable audio. So I am not going to put money on that... but you should have a spare handy since the 6AQ5 is a very common tube and you will encounter them in the future. The Vikings were not that inexpensive when new. The book says $ 279 in kit form. A friend that is much older than I am told me it was about $ 100 more if factory built. It todays dollars, that is probably a 3 to 5 thousand dollar rig. The Vikings saw commercial service all over the place, and even found themselves in broadcast service. As late as the 1980s, both HCJB and one of the C&W stations in the Caribbean were using them as shortwave broadcast transmitters, continuous key down for days on end. New, they were not cheap by ham standards, but they were very cheap by commercial standards and because there were so many in commercial service they turned up surplus at good prices a lot. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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