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#1
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I recently purchased a Hammarlund HQ110A and I cannot get it to operate. It powers up, the lights and meters seem to function properly, but I cannot get any reception - just white noise. I do not have external speakers, so I use headphones....I do not have a proper antenna, so I'm just using a length of wire....since this is all new to me, I'm not sure of how to set the various controls on the unit (pitch, sensitivity, AVC. LIM, audio gain, freq, selectivity, multiplier).
Can anyone offer me some advice? Also, how hard is it to find parts and to get repairs on these units? Thanks. |
#2
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On 1/4/2011 8:40 AM, lkdubb wrote:
I recently purchased a Hammarlund HQ110A and I cannot get it to operate. It powers up, the lights and meters seem to function properly, but I cannot get any reception - just white noise. I do not have external speakers, so I use headphones....I do not have a proper antenna, so I'm just using a length of wire....since this is all new to me, I'm not sure of how to set the various controls on the unit (pitch, sensitivity, AVC. LIM, audio gain, freq, selectivity, multiplier). Can anyone offer me some advice? Also, how hard is it to find parts and to get repairs on these units? Thanks. Sensitivity all the way up, AM mode, limiter off, peak up the "antenna" control, audio gain for a comfortable level, tune around the 7-7.3 MHz band daytime or 3.5-4 MHz band at night -- there should be lots of signals. If not, try replacing the tubes one at a time. Jiggle the bandswitch -- its contacts (and some of the potentiometers) may be dirty with age and need to be spritzed with WD-40 or a cleaner. Beyond that, the set may have developed some bad capacitors or other components. The manual for the receiver is he http://hamradiomanualsonline.com/200...ervice-manual/ The best place to find a real expert to help you will probably be: http://amfone.net/Amforum/index.php I'd highly recommend joining and participating there. All the best, Kevin, WB4AIO. -- http://nationalvanguard.org/ http://kevinalfredstrom.com/ |
#3
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On Jan 4, 5:40*am, lkdubb wrote:
I recently purchased a Hammarlund HQ110A and I cannot get it to operate. It powers up, the lights and meters seem to function properly, but I cannot get any reception - just white noise. I do not have external speakers, so I use headphones....I do not have a proper antenna, so I'm just using a length of wire....since this is all new to me, I'm not sure of how to set the various controls on the unit (pitch, sensitivity, AVC. LIM, audio gain, freq, selectivity, multiplier). Can anyone offer me some advice? Also, how hard is it to find parts and to get repairs on these units? Thanks. It is actually easier to repair old vacuum tube electronics than it is to repair a modern IC based radio that is out of production by a few years. There's plenty of new old stock (NOS, "new" in the box yet 50 or 60 years old) tubes still out there. But tubes don't go bad just sitting there, so the tubes in your radio are probably OK. More than likely, the problem is in dirty switch contacts, or resistors or capacitors that have gone bad. One can find new stock replacements that might not look much like the old ones, but electrically are far better and more reliable. You will need a voltmeter (preferably a vacuum tube voltmeter, but a modern digital multimeter will work, especially if it has a bar- display mode which will be useful for aligning the IF coils an transformers). A signal generator that can go up to at least 30 MHz is also a big plus, since it will help a great deal in aligning the set (more than likely, it has drifted out of alignment, re-aligning it will restore it to like-new selectivity and sensitivity). It's best to get a service manual for the set, particularly if you haven't done this sort of thing before. Then you can just follow the troubleshooting and aligning instructions therein. More tips on fixing old radios can be found at: http://www.antiqueradio.org/howfix.htm -- David Barts Portland, OR |
#4
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PS - Be aware that vacuum tubes require and use significantly higher
voltages than semiconductors. You will have to take precautions to avoid getting zapped. You can't be casual around powered-on vacuum tube electronics like you can around low-voltage semiconductor circuits. -- David Barts Portland, OR |
#5
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On 1/4/11 11:47 , Kevin Alfred Strom wrote:
On 1/4/2011 8:40 AM, lkdubb wrote: I recently purchased a Hammarlund HQ110A and I cannot get it to operate. It powers up, the lights and meters seem to function properly, but I cannot get any reception - just white noise. I do not have external speakers, so I use headphones....I do not have a proper antenna, so I'm just using a length of wire....since this is all new to me, I'm not sure of how to set the various controls on the unit (pitch, sensitivity, AVC. LIM, audio gain, freq, selectivity, multiplier). Can anyone offer me some advice? Also, how hard is it to find parts and to get repairs on these units? Thanks. Sensitivity all the way up, AM mode, limiter off, peak up the "antenna" control, audio gain for a comfortable level, tune around the 7-7.3 MHz band daytime or 3.5-4 MHz band at night -- there should be lots of signals. If not, try replacing the tubes one at a time. Jiggle the bandswitch -- its contacts (and some of the potentiometers) may be dirty with age and need to be spritzed with WD-40 or a cleaner. Beyond that, the set may have developed some bad capacitors or other components. The manual for the receiver is he http://hamradiomanualsonline.com/200...ervice-manual/ The best place to find a real expert to help you will probably be: http://amfone.net/Amforum/index.php I'd highly recommend joining and participating there. All the best, Kevin, WB4AIO. Hammarlund's typically have more sensitivity than may actually be used. Turning RF Gain all the way up, and turning off the limiter will drive the front end into blocking. Turn the limiter off, yes, but increase sensitivity until you encounter artifacts, or distortion or quiet resulting from severe clipping. WD-40 is not really recommended for pots and switches. Caig products for cleaning pots and switches are a better choice. Replacing caps on a Hammar is quite easy. Alignment can, depending on model, be done using nothing more than non conductive tools and WWV. Congratulations. A nice rig. |
#6
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On Tuesday, January 4, 2011 at 8:40:37 AM UTC-5, lkdubb wrote:
I recently purchased a Hammarlund HQ110A and I cannot get it to operate. It powers up, the lights and meters seem to function properly, but I cannot get any reception - just white noise. I do not have external speakers, so I use headphones....I do not have a proper antenna, so I'm just using a length of wire....since this is all new to me, I'm not sure of how to set the various controls on the unit (pitch, sensitivity, AVC. LIM, audio gain, freq, selectivity, multiplier). Can anyone offer me some advice? Also, how hard is it to find parts and to get repairs on these units? Thanks. -- lkdubb Though this request and info is quite old I thought this hint might be helpful to other. I recently purchased the same receiver, used, and found this gentleman's symptom description exactly like I had been experiencing. I had checked all tubes and am pretty familiar with bringing these things back to life as well as their typical operating status at the age these are now.It seemed like it should work, but it didn't! I decided to check out the manual before proceeding with the assessing, changing etc. any other component parts. I found in the operating manual for the HQ-110A, an unusual feature with communications receivers, at least like this one. There is an AC 'style' jack in the back of this receiver which in default mode (Manufacturer's Status) accommodates an "AC Style" plug. A rather unusual application for these items! The receiver had been used in Transmit/Receive configuration by the former owner, and the 'AC plug' had been removed to accommodate a T/R Relay operation. With no 'dummy plug' inserted, the signal processing tubes are unable to function, and one hears static etc. but no signals. Once I realized this and created a shorted 'AC plug' plugged it in, voila! Signals galore. I just thought this information might be helpful to the next 'fixer upper' that might come by the thread. Hope it helps someone avoid a very complicated experience in rejuvenating this receiver. - K2BET |
#7
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#9
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On Thu, 03 May 2018 21:53:36 -0400, George Cornelius wrote:
+AD4 Interesting. Just what I want to have around is a two-prong A/C plug +AD4 which will catch fire when inserted into a wall outlet. +AD4 +AD4 Or, for that matter, which when inserted into the back of a receiver +AD4 which is actually supplying power via that connector. +AD4 +AD4 George Check out the +ACI-B Switch+ACI terminal strip mentioned at the bottom of this page: https://people.ohio.edu/postr/bapix/NC-183D.htm Boatanchor B+- on a bare screw terminal strip of the same kind as the speaker and antenna connections. No fuse and no warning, either, unless you're hip to the meaning of +ACI-B Switch+ACI. Hallicrafters used an octal socket and an octal shorting plug for similar duty on alot of it's radios. The octal socket was a convenient place to borrow power for an external accessory such as a Q multiplier. The shorting plug sometimes went AWOL, which would disable the receiver. It's very easy to fab up a duplicate or just short a couple of terminals on the back of the octal socket. The Hallicrafters octal socket is usually labeled +ACI-POWER+ACI. The manual that came with the radio showed a schematic to run the radio on battery power or, presumably, a dynamotor. No power fuses on these radios but they're easy to add. Alot of these ham/SWL radios came with a phono switch. Were turntables often used with these radios? It seemed pretty useless to me, then it struck me that the phono switch position would be ideal for use with a Select-O-Ject or something similar. The phono switch doesn't disable the radio and audio is still available at the headphone jack. The switch just switches the audio input of the speaker amplifier to the RCA jack on the back panel. I don't have a Select-O-Ject to try it but it seems like it would work well. |
#10
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![]() "BET" : I just wanted to thank you for your posting this week about the relay socket jumper! ![]() Double checking for the missing jumper and making a "shorting plug" is now getting me headed toward having the radio working. The cosmetics arent too bad, and the radio is electrically unmolested. I did get a carrier on 20, and 80 so far..... Tomorrow will be hook it to an antenna, and see what I hear. At least I dont have a total parts radio! ![]() Next is to find 1 of 2 "parts" either the filler for the clock, or a clock (non working, but cosmetically good is fine) Again Thank You for the "heads up"..... ACtually had a smilar problem with a Knight T-150... de Howard, N9KTW |
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