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![]() "Pete KE9OA" ) writes: Those filters were pretty awful................I don't remember the name of the company name, but it started with the letter K. They were used in the NRD-515 and in the Yaesu FRDX-400. They were filled with some sort of foam substance that turns to a sticky jelly after many years, causing the insertion loss of the filter to degrade. Peter Bertini had an article in Popular Communications a few years ago on how to repair them. I did just that for a friend's FRDX-400. You have to dismantle the filter and clean out all of the goo with alcohol..........I used a product called Flux-Off. Of course, one pays quite a bit for Collins mechanical filters, and that's always been the case. Those Japanese mechanical filters were significantly cheaper, at least back then. Reading the old magazines, I've sometimes wondered if at least some times people were calling ceramic filters the wrong thing. Your description of the insides reminds me that some guy wrote about a homebrew receiver in the early sixties, I think it was in CQ, and he made his own mechanical filter. No, I don't have it handy and can't specify the issue, but every so often I come across the article, and wonder how practical it was to do. It seems like we'd have read more about doing it if it was something easily doable. Michael |
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