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In 1975, I worked for a marine radio company called Konel.
I worked on their first synthesized radio, which I inherited from another designer. The original design had a VCO that was quite microphonic. We didn't even bother with beeswax, we potted itin Red Glyptol. Even that wasn't good enough for two reasons. The speaker was in the same box and the sailors would turn it up so you could hear the radio over the engine noise. Also, the 10,000 HP engines on tug boats produced a lot of vibration which got into the VCO. I designed a VCO with an inductor printed on the PC board, and that did the trick. A few months later, Konel went out of business and few if any radios were produced. Rick N6RK "Larry Gagnon" wrote in message news ![]() I posted a few days ago about repairing a VHF marine radio. Thankfully I solved my problem, locating three cold solder joints in the VCO, which entailed removing metal shields and all the beeswax that coated all the components. That was character building work! I gather the beeswax is to ensure rigid components to maintain stability of the oscillator? Any other reasons for it? Is it necessary for me to remelt the old wax and spread it around as before, or can I get away with just reshielding the VCO? Any suggestions appreciated. Larry VE7EA -- ******************************** to reply via email remove "fake" Microsoft will soon release their newest product: a vacuum cleaner. It will be their only product which doesn't suck. |