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#1
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Picked up an S38B to relive my childhood and it seems to work on AM
about as well as my only other receiver, TS430. I am going to make it my AM station receiver if and when I can get the BFO to work. I still need the Kenwood to know where the Ranger is at. I tried moving the E wire around as suggested in the manual but it did not help. No heterodyne at all. Anyone with any experience with this? JACK K9ACT -- PHOTO OF THE WEEK: http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silver http://schmidling.com |
#2
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"Jack Schmidling" wrote in message
... Picked up an S38B to relive my childhood and it seems to work on AM about as well as my only other receiver, TS430. I am going to make it my AM station receiver if and when I can get the BFO to work. I still need the Kenwood to know where the Ranger is at. I tried moving the E wire around as suggested in the manual but it did not help. No heterodyne at all. Anyone with any experience with this? JACK K9ACT Brian Ripley, K8BR of Ogden, Utah has a great site devoted to the care and restoration of the Hallicrafters S-38 series. http://www.the-s38-guy.com/ Your BFO question http://www.the-s38-guy.com/Page_63.html Back cover S38 series reproductions are available from Bob's Antique Radio & Electronics - LaGrange Park, IL http://www.radioantiques.com/mall.html |
#3
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Jack Schmidling wrote:
Picked up an S38B to relive my childhood and it seems to work on AM about as well as my only other receiver, TS430. I am going to make it my AM station receiver if and when I can get the BFO to work. Just for fun, try a kludge BFO. Place an AM broadcast band radio (non-digital) as physically close to the S38 as you can get it. Tune the broadcast band radio until you hear a beat with the AM or CW signal you are listening to on the S38. The oscillator in the AM radio should leak into the S38 to cause the beat. Course it depends on somewhat poor shielding on both receivers to work. I sometimes used this method as a kid to listen to SSB and CW on those old SW receivers that didn't have a BFO. Those were the days... ![]() |
#4
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AaronJ wrote:
Just for fun, try a kludge BFO. Place an AM broadcast band radio (non-digital) as physically close to the S38 as you can get it. Tune the broadcast band radio until you hear a beat with the AM or CW signal you are listening to on the S38. Actually, I already did that but it's a pretty academic exercise. After all is said, seems like there should be some way to control the feedback to both provide a beat and optimize the gain/selectivity. I have no interest in CW or sideband with this radio but I do need some way to set my ranger on the station I am listening to. Any thoughts on an outboard tweak? js -- PHOTO OF THE WEEK: http://schmidling.com/pow.htm Astronomy, Beer, Cheese, Fiber,Gems, Sausage,Silver http://schmidling.com |
#5
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Jack Schmidling ) writes:
AaronJ wrote: Just for fun, try a kludge BFO. Place an AM broadcast band radio (non-digital) as physically close to the S38 as you can get it. Tune the broadcast band radio until you hear a beat with the AM or CW signal you are listening to on the S38. Actually, I already did that but it's a pretty academic exercise. After all is said, seems like there should be some way to control the feedback to both provide a beat and optimize the gain/selectivity. There's no control for it? That seems odd. The trick is to make the cathode resistor variable, and use that to control the level of regeneration. I have no interest in CW or sideband with this radio but I do need some way to set my ranger on the station I am listening to. Any thoughts on an outboard tweak? js Don't put it on transmit, but key the oscillator? Old rigs often were set up that way, so you'd have a weak signal from the transmitter to set the receiver to. Or, they'd have some spotting function specifically for it. Michael VE2BVW |
#6
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The simplest way I can think of is to go over to the shelf of test equipment
and grab the old Heath signal generator and attach a foot long wire close to the S-38. Then tune the generator to 455 kc (whoops, that is kHz). You will have a nice beat note. Like the others have said, convert the if stage into an oscillator - then reduce the feedback to get it to stop oscillating. That will then be sort of a Q multiplier while in the feedback but not enough to oscillate stage. You would need a control to put in and out of oscillation. A pot, a variable capacitor or a switch. Or, just a hum a few bars into the Ranger mike and tune for best audio. 73, Colin |
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