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![]() K3HVG wrote: Purpose built VFO's, as you call them, generally allow for presetting an offset or offsets such that a "dialed-in" frequency reads out directly in the use frequency rather than the actual mixing or insertion frequency. Additionally, as with S-Line equipment, etc. that use band-dependent, multiple mixing formulas, multiple offsets may be set into VFOs such as the S&S unit I mentioned. Cost wise, they probably cost the same initially but I'd hate to have to pay to repair an HP. I personally have not experienced the front-end problems as you describe, but then I generally use my R-390A's. The 51S1AF/551G sort of sit on the shelf, looking pretty. I did an article on general-coverage for the Drake "C" line via a purpose-built VFO in an ER article last year. You might, perhaps, be interested in having a look at it. Regards Jeep/K3HVG I think ER is a noble effort but it's a little expensive for someone who is not actively hamming. The S&S I'm not familiar with but I remember AOR made the dual section vfo that replaced both the xtal section and the pto on S-Line. Looked vaguely like a tiny S-Line. I guarantee it would be no cheaper to fix than a synthesized HP if you were not too concerned with the precision of the attenuator of the HP. In fact if you can get a 8656A that was not field upgraded to the PIN diode attenuator, and the mech attenuator went bad, (they do) I doubt it would bring more than a hundred bucks. Use it straight through at +13 or +17 or get the little rotary stepped job IFR uses in the 500/1200. I knew a guy who worked there who summarily changed every one he worked on for over a year : he gave me half a dozen and said they were all good under 400 MHz. IFR charged a couple hundred apiece but they were like $60 from the source, maybe Berkleley Varitronics. IIRC the 8656/57 have 100 preset frequencies you can program in, so you just use it channelized, since you only need to select for the "band". The limits on fixing 8640s is the presence of some HP custom IC's. I have no idea if there are proprietary ICs in the 8656/57. In general fixing HP equipment is easy. IFR is a mechanical nightmare but electrically simple. Systron Donner-throw it off a cliff! Someone suggested that the newer generation of arbs had the frequency range and level to do the job and as well most are USB controllable. I don't know if their spectral purity is good enough though. The R-390 is the Marilyn Monroe of HF radios, though. Isn't it? |