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July 12th 13, 12:58 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
dave
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2012
Posts: 327
GPR-90
On 07/12/2013 12:42 AM,
wrote:
On Thursday, July 11, 2013 12:41:11 PM UTC-4, dave wrote:
I can't afford electricity to waste on old radios.
My R-390(not A)got drowned in seawater last year, during the storm called Sandy . Now I don't know what to do with it...
Wash it out really good with fresh water, then blow it out with your
leaf blower. Let it bake in the sun.
The K3 is a better radio and uses a Watt or two on receive (0.77 Amperes
at 14VDC actually). It satisfies my high performance Jones, without
dominating my life. I really like the way the 51J3 looks.
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July 12th 13, 01:05 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
dave
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2012
Posts: 327
GPR-90
On 07/12/2013 04:53 AM, Michael Black wrote:
On Fri, 12 Jul 2013,
wrote:
My R-390(not A)got drowned in seawater last year, during the storm
called Sandy . Now I don't know what to do with it...
It's kind of late now. You should have carefuly rinsed it out at the
time, getting into all the crevices, then let it dry carefully, usually
by putting it in the oven at a very low temperature for some hours.
Every so often the ham magazines would run articles about what to do
with equipment that fell into even salt water. I think Glen Zook did a
piece in CQ in the early seventies, that did deal with something as
complicated as the R390.
I once dragged home a stereo receiver that I found in a bank of snow, it
was suffering from some minor salt damage due to salt used for melting
ice. I rinsed it carefully and then popped it in the oven, and that got
rid of the salt, it ran for years.
Michael
I'd like to see the oven an R-390A will fit in...
Run it with filaments only, for a couple days, if you need artificial
heat. Don't turn off "Standby" until you are sure it is dry. Use a dim
bulb tester to prevent damaging current surge. Stay alert.
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