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The mystery is solved!
Thanks for the tips, suggestions, and lively discussion. I was able to loosen and adjust all of the coil slugs in the radio without breaking any. Belive me, fellas, that radio was in sore need of alignment! Now that I have the set functioning, I can continue with troubleshooting and restoration. Here's what I did to loosen the slugs: 1. denatured alcohol... no luck 2. non-acetone nail polish remover... no luck 3. acetone... yahoo!!! After sitting for a couple of minutes, the acetone loosened the sealer enough that I was able to break the slugs loose with a plastic alignment tool (I apparently pushed someone's buttons when I referred to that tool as a "diddle stick" in an earlier post!). I removed the slugs, one at a time, and cleaned all of the old sealer out of the threads. It looks a lot like some kind of lacquer, which makes sense if I was able to soften it with acetone. Two of the coil forms had their internal threads factory pre-stripped-out, so I had to use some melted wax to hold the slugs in place in those coils. Anyway, a big "73" to the guys who suggested acetone, 'cuz your suggestion was ultimately the right one! To those curious as to why I would even care enought to do all of this work on an old CB radio, I have a very simple answer: restoring ANY old radio is fun! What am I gonna do with the finished product? Sell it, of course (likely at a huge loss). 73, Dean K5DH |
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