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DRAKE TECHNICAL NET 7.238 UPDATE

 

Today Evan, K9SQG was the NCS for today's net.? He had 37 check-ins. The net always starts at 4PM Eastern on 7.238 +/- QRM.
The band was in really good condition. The following radios were used?:
?
A-LINE - 2
B-LINE - 2
C-LINE - 7
TR4(X) - 10
TR5 - 4
TR7(x) - 6
OTHERS - 6
?
73'S,
Mark, WB0IQK


2NT side tone quality

 

Good day,?

Moving further ahead towards completion of getting this novice station back in line. No that the delay potentiometer is sorted, I'm now focused on the side tone.

Setup is 2NT, 2C, 2BQ, HA-5 VFO as well as crystals.

Everything is operating well and I have made some contacts again today. When using the side tone, the note sounds good but there is also a strong buzzing sound. Previously before the 2C was acquired, I was just listening directly without side tone on the 2B.?

Both the 2NT and 2C have been recapped. Please let me know if you have any thoughts!

Joe ki5o?


Re: 2-NT T/R relay delay

 

Bob thank you for the help on this. The potentiometer arrived today and the delay adjustment is working perfectly.

Joe ki5o?


Re: Drake W4 wattmeter part three

 

Yeah, there were some surplus Motorola repeater rack meters floating around eBay for a while that were almost the correct Jewell version but were more sensitive. I bought one, added an external shunt, and rescued a WV4. It's possible that someone got ahold of one of those and didn't understand the concept.

73

-Jim
NU0C

On Sun, 21 Jan 2024 09:28:41 -0800
"jerry-KF6VB" <jerry@...> wrote:

On 2024-01-21 09:21, mike bryce wrote:

I¡¯m wondering if at one time someone swapped out the meter for
something much more sensitive instead of the stated 200uA one Drake
used.
*** I can easily imagine somebody scoring a nice meter and just sticking
it in.

Once upon a time...

...As a preteen in San Francisco, I attended an after school electronics
program known as "Lux Labs". We had lectures, and we built projects.
One
of our first projects was a crystal radio. The program provided us with
all
the parts, including a cheap headset.

Down on Radio Row, I scored a really nice Western Electric headset.

For some reason, my crystal radio never worked. The instructor
checked all my
wiring, pulled on my solder joints - all OK. But not a peep out of it.

Some twenty years later, I woke up one morning, sat up in bed, and
said "600 ohms!"

...which was surely the input impedance of that nice WE headset. Way
too low for
a crystal radio.

- Jerry, KF6VB






--

73

-Jim
NU0C


Re: Drake W4 wattmeter part three

 

On 2024-01-21 09:21, mike bryce wrote:

I¡¯m wondering if at one time someone swapped out the meter for
something much more sensitive instead of the stated 200uA one Drake
used.
*** I can easily imagine somebody scoring a nice meter and just sticking
it in.

Once upon a time...

...As a preteen in San Francisco, I attended an after school electronics
program known as "Lux Labs". We had lectures, and we built projects. One
of our first projects was a crystal radio. The program provided us with all
the parts, including a cheap headset.

Down on Radio Row, I scored a really nice Western Electric headset.

For some reason, my crystal radio never worked. The instructor checked all my
wiring, pulled on my solder joints - all OK. But not a peep out of it.

Some twenty years later, I woke up one morning, sat up in bed, and said "600 ohms!"

...which was surely the input impedance of that nice WE headset. Way too low for
a crystal radio.

- Jerry, KF6VB


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 

I was going to buy some Fluke test meter leads from Amazon. After reading the reviews, it was apparent the leads Amazon was selling were fake Chinese junk.

mike wb8vge

On Jan 21, 2024, at 12:19 PM, Lyndon VE7TFX <lyndon@...> wrote:

Frank Barnes writes:

Amazon will sell us all the 1N34A's we want and the prices are inexpensive,
about 60 cents each with free delivery for Prime members.
And the odds are close to 100% that none of those are actual 1N34s.
Amazon semiconductors are almost guaranteed to be fakes. Don't Do
It.

--lyndon





Re: Drake W4 wattmeter part three

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý


Gang,

Before I celebrate too much, I have a couple more W4 meters that have the opposite problem¡ªtoo much deflection¡ªcan¡¯t set the calibration

If I apply 100W, the meter begs, and if you switch scales to 2000W, 100W of RF shows 900W

Again, a look at the simple schematic will help when I try to explain what I ended up doing.

On the 200W scale, trimmer R4 sets the calibration. On the 2000W scale, trimmer R4 is still used, but then R3, R2 are in series.

So I measured resistance between the cathode of D1 to the brown wire that goes to the 200W selector. I read 12K (the trimmer is actually 12K) and of course I can adjust the value down to about 100¦¸ or so.

Switch to 2000W scale, and measured about 80K¦¸ of resistance from the cathode of D1 to the wire that goes to the 2000W selector tab.

The wiring to both the 200W and 2000W meter positions are in perfect working order. So why does the meter go off scale no matter where the trimmers are set?

What I ended up doing was to insert a resistor in series with the wire that runs to the selector switch on both power levels.

On the 200W scale, I ended up with 62K, and the 2000W scale required a whopping 220K!

I¡¯m wondering if at one time someone swapped out the meter for something much more sensitive instead of the stated 200uA one Drake used.

Mike wb8vge



Re: Drake W4 wattmeter woes and some success

 

On 2024-01-21 08:58, Ralph Mowery via groups.io wrote:

Part of my job was to calibrate all kinds of instruments in a large
plant.
*** I did that too! I worked in the instrument shop at GTE Lenkurt.
Mostly I did repairs, but calibration was never far from our minds.
We piped 10Mhz all over the plant to feed the various instruments. There
was a rubidium standard in the back room. Once a day, a guy would
set the old standard to the rubidium one using a Lissajous figure.

- Jerry, KF6VB


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

Lyndon VE7TFX
 

Frank Barnes writes:

Amazon will sell us all the 1N34A's we want and the prices are inexpensive,
about 60 cents each with free delivery for Prime members.
And the odds are close to 100% that none of those are actual 1N34s.
Amazon semiconductors are almost guaranteed to be fakes. Don't Do
It.

--lyndon


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 

I purchased 1N34As on eBay and didn¡¯t figure they were actually silicon diodes until after the boards were stuffed and flow soldered.

Rob, NC0B

On Jan 21, 2024, at 10:12 AM, jerry-KF6VB <jerry@...> wrote:

?On 2024-01-21 08:53, mike bryce wrote:
One has to be very careful about buying electronic parts from Amazon.
Lots of counterfeit stuff here.
*** Reviews on one of the 1N34 listings say that they are silicon
Hot Carrier Diodes.

One can find 1N34A's that are believably authentic on Ebay.

- Jerry






Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 

On 2024-01-21 09:09, Paul Christensen wrote:

Passives mostly seem OK, but I only purchase semiconductors through
industrial suppliers where there¡¯s accountability in the chain of
custody between time of manufacture and point of sale.
*** I bought a baggie of cheap IRF510's from a discount house. When I
wired them into an amp, they wouldn't take the quiescent. When I approached
it - turning up the bias - they would just run away and burn up. Real 510s from Mouser worked fine.

- Jerry, KF6VB


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 

On 2024-01-21 08:53, mike bryce wrote:
One has to be very careful about buying electronic parts from Amazon.
Lots of counterfeit stuff here.
*** Reviews on one of the 1N34 listings say that they are silicon
Hot Carrier Diodes.

One can find 1N34A's that are believably authentic on Ebay.

- Jerry


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

>¡±One has to be very careful about buying electronic parts from Amazon.¡±

?

Passives mostly seem OK, but I only purchase semiconductors through industrial suppliers where there¡¯s accountability in the chain of custody between time of manufacture and point of sale.? I recently needed some MRF237 RF transistors ¨C a device long obsolete.? But miraculously, all the Motorola branded MRF237s ended up in China. ?For all we know it¡¯s a re-labeled 2N3053.? Same goes for Tayda Electronics that seemingly everyone loves.? Possibly their 741 op-amps and 1N400x diodes are OK, but I won¡¯t take the chance. ??

?

Paul, W9AC


Re: Drake W4 wattmeter woes and some success

 

Thanks for? telling up the repair.

People put too much into the wattmeter numbers.? I just think that if any of the broad range wattmeters are with in about 10% that is good enough.? If I am thinking right just 1 db is about 25 % and that is hardly noticeable? on the receiving end.? I have several wattmeters and the? Drakes mostly match a Struthers I have.? I have 3 Heathkits and I just used the Struthers and set them to match it at 14 MHz and let it go at that.

When measuring the power of a transmitter I just note if it is within 10 % of what it is rated for.? If there is any? big change the next time I check it with the? same meter then I may start look for what the problem is, meter, dummy load , or transmitter.

Part of my job was to calibrate all kinds of instruments in a large plant.? We had two calibrators for each type of instrument? we calibrated and set everything to those calibrators? which were sent out every year for calibration.

Ralph ku4pt




On Sunday, January 21, 2024 at 11:37:58 AM EST, mike bryce <prosolar@...> wrote:


³Ò²¹²Ô²µ¡­

An update on the W4 wattmeter.

The one with the low readings and the inability to set the meter calibration has been fixed!

The problem?

Capacitor C5 showed about 3k¦¸ of resistance!

Replaced C5 and C4 (why not?) and I could calibrated the meter.

Now¡­ according to Drake they want you to use 14mhz and apply so many volts RMS across the 50¦¸ dummy load with one value at 100W and the second at 1000W. I can¡¯t generated 1000W on 14mhz, so I set the 200W scale to 100 W, then set the 2000W scale to 100W.


I know an analog? meter is not as accurate on the lower end of its scale, but that¡¯s the best I can do.

Mike, wb8vge


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

One has to be very careful about buying electronic parts from Amazon.?

Lots of counterfeit stuff here.

mike wb8vge

On Jan 21, 2024, at 10:50 AM, Frank Barnes <fbw4npn@...> wrote:

Amazon will sell us all the 1N34A's we want and the prices are inexpensive, about 60 cents each with free delivery for Prime members.

On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 7:53?AM Gregory Beat via <w9gb=[email protected]> wrote:


greg, w9gb




--
Frank Barnes
W4NPN
Chapel Hill, NC
Grid Square FM05
Cell 919.260.7955


Re: Drake W4 wattmeter woes and some success

 

³Ò²¹²Ô²µ¡­

An update on the W4 wattmeter.

The one with the low readings and the inability to set the meter calibration has been fixed!

The problem?

Capacitor C5 showed about 3k¦¸ of resistance!

Replaced C5 and C4 (why not?) and I could calibrated the meter.

Now¡­ according to Drake they want you to use 14mhz and apply so many volts RMS across the 50¦¸ dummy load with one value at 100W and the second at 1000W. I can¡¯t generated 1000W on 14mhz, so I set the 200W scale to 100 W, then set the 2000W scale to 100W.


I know an analog meter is not as accurate on the lower end of its scale, but that¡¯s the best I can do.

Mike, wb8vge


Re: Drake W4 wattmeter woes...

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Sounds like a plan¡­ many thanks.


Mike, WB8VGE



On Jan 21, 2024, at 12:11 AM, K6OXN Bob <bobk6oxn@...> wrote:

Mike, I did find some of my 1N34A diodes that I used in my W4. I will place a couple in the mail to you to try. Don't have enough to fix 4 W4's but it might be a start.

73? Bob


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 

Amazon will sell us all the 1N34A's we want and the prices are inexpensive, about 60 cents each with free delivery for Prime members.

On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 7:53?AM Gregory Beat via <w9gb=[email protected]> wrote:

[Edited Message Follows]

Germanium Diodes are used for Rectification/Detection (RF¡ª> DC)
in RF/SWR meters (and Antenna Tuners with Internal meters) due to low voltage drop (0.3V).
Common Germanium Diodes are: 1N34(A), 1N60, 1N270, and 1N295.

These Germanium Diodes DIFFER in their Voltage and Current Ratings.
DRAKE frequently used the 1N270 diode in many of their Antenna Tuners, Wattmeters.
==
Schottky Diodes (1N5819,?BAT41, BAT43), can be Substituted for Germanium diodes?
due to similar Low Voltage Drop (0.3-0.5V).? Silicon not suitable (0.7 V drop).
** At the millennium, with RoHS mfg. conversion, many types of Germanium diodes disappeared. **
Through-hole reduction, due to Surface Mount replacement, also a production issue.
¡ª
Central Semiconductor CDSH270 was a Schottky Diode designed to replace the 1N270 Germanium diode.
100V, 100mA, through-hole, DO-35 package Schottky diode.

Central Semi Discontinued, after a ~15 year production run.
Some advantages over the 1N270 are lower forward voltage, lower leakage current,
faster switching speed, and a more robust package.

greg, w9gb



--
Frank Barnes
W4NPN
Chapel Hill, NC
Grid Square FM05
Cell 919.260.7955


Re: W4 has 1N34A available for it.

 
Edited

Germanium Diodes are used for Rectification/Detection (RF¡ª> DC)
in RF/SWR meters (and Antenna Tuners with Internal meters) due to low voltage drop (0.3V).
Common Germanium Diodes are: 1N34(A), 1N60, 1N270, and 1N295.

These Germanium Diodes DIFFER in their Voltage and Current Ratings.
DRAKE frequently used the 1N270 diode in many of their Antenna Tuners, Wattmeters.
==
Schottky Diodes (1N5819,?BAT41, BAT43), can be Substituted for Germanium diodes?
due to similar Low Voltage Drop (0.3-0.5V). ?Silicon not suitable (0.7 V drop).
** At the millennium, with RoHS mfg. conversion, many types of Germanium diodes disappeared. **
Through-hole reduction, due to Surface Mount replacement, also a production issue.
¡ª
Central Semiconductor CDSH270 was a Schottky Diode designed to replace the 1N270 Germanium diode.
100V, 100mA, through-hole, DO-35 package Schottky diode.

Central Semi Discontinued, after a ~15 year production run.
Some advantages over the 1N270 are lower forward voltage, lower leakage current,
faster switching speed, and a more robust package.

greg, w9gb


Re: Drake W4 wattmeter woes...

 

Mike, I did find some of my 1N34A diodes that I used in my W4. I will place a couple in the mail to you to try. Don't have enough to fix 4 W4's but it might be a start.

73? Bob