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#1
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Were you trying to run a net with a BC348 as your primary receiver??
The I.F. is as wide as a gorge! When the band is hot I could never use 348 without the 'Q5er.' "Bill M" wrote in message ... David Stinson wrote: The big scare on Friday night was the unmistakable smell of roasted resistor coming from the BC-348-R, which then crashed, stone dead. I brought plenty of spares parts and started "resuscitation" right away. This receiver had been running flawlessly for a month (as had the transmitter), but now *three* paper bypass caps failed, leaking to short. This toasted two dropping resistors, failing them *low-Z*. One 4.7 K-ohm was down to 200 ohms. The real scare was that these were in the IF plate leads, right through the hair-fine wire in the IF transformer windings. The way the receiver suddenly died, I was sure one of the IFs had gone open, but there must have been an angel watching over us, because new caps and resistors plus re-alignment brought it back from the dead. On the antique radio forums we make a point of driving home "replace those go***mn paper caps because they are never good". You've been around, Dave, You should know better! Since this post is only to the BA forum instead of cross-posting to rar+p I can admit that the only old radio out of dozens that I have not been compelled to wholesale recap has been an English Barker 88 which used surplus (at the time) metal cased US war-surplus caps. They all, 100%, passed any test I could give them. More often it makes sense to yank the old paper jobbies and place giant Orange Globs (for the non-restuffers) ...or in your case, assume they were ok with the resulting consequence. FB on the expedition's results.. -Bill WX4A |
#2
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![]() Albert & Btittany Spear wrote: Were you trying to run a net with a BC348 as your primary receiver?? The I.F. is as wide as a gorge! When the band is hot I could never use 348 without the 'Q5er.' I understand, but the whole point was to operate the special event with as close to an actual, authentic 8th Airforce WWII heavy bomber radio station as possible. Otherwise, it would just be a contact with a typical 1950s ham rig. So we announced on the net, on QRZ.COM, in QST and on the DX reflectors, what we were doing and asked for help. Most people did what they could to help-out and they were a godsend. Even with QRM from the few bad apples, I think we did pretty well. 73 Dave S. |
#3
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![]() "Albert & Btittany Spear" ) writes: Were you trying to run a net with a BC348 as your primary receiver?? The I.F. is as wide as a gorge! When the band is hot I could never use 348 without the 'Q5er.' BUt a wide receiver bandwidth means all the transmitters do not have to be on exact frequency, something useful for net use. And back when it was a current receiver, the BC348 would be extremely useful for that. After all, transmitters were not frequency controlled with the receivers. Michael VE2BVW |
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