Re: Parting out an SX-100
The “un-yellowing” procedure is for the clear plastic meter cover, not the meter face itself.? I have no idea how the “un-yellowing” procedure would work on the meter face card.
Mike/ K5MGR _____________________________ ? Mike Langner 929 Alameda Road NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@...
?
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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Bob Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2024 2:20 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [HallicraftersRadios] Parting out an SX-100? So the print stays intact? If you mentioned that, I missed it. ? On Wed, Jun 12, 2024, 12:26 AM Rudy Littrell via <kc5yl.radio=[email protected]> wrote: Donald and Mike.? ?Thanks for your de-yellow info.? Mine must have seen a lot of sun exposure. It's as yellow as a turn signal lense.? ? Gosh, Thank you for that Mike as I had not the heart to tell Rudy that I've never had or seen an SX-100 S meter cover that wasn't yellowed! And now I will be able to clear the covers on the two that I have that are quite yellowed. I'm recent to this group so missed and didn't know to look for something about meter covers. ? Note to Rudy, kc5yl --
Hello Rudy!
I failed to keep your email address, so my apologies for sending this to the group.
If your SX-100 meter lens is yellowed but otherwise in good shape, please take a look at “Retro-Brite,” a spray that restores yellowed plastic.? It’s available from many sources, including Amazon.?
Recently there was a flurry of exchanges about ways to de-yellow plastic, most of which revolved around hydrogen peroxide and sunlight, with some augmentation chemicals added in for good measure.
You should be able to restore the “yellow-free” nature of the plastic with little effort!
Good luck a& 73!
Mike/ K5MGR _____________________________________________ ? Mike Langner NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@... ?
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Re: Parting out an SX-100
So the print stays intact? If you mentioned that, I missed it. Bob W4JFA
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On Wed, Jun 12, 2024, 12:26 AM Rudy Littrell via <kc5yl.radio= [email protected]> wrote: Donald and Mike.? ?Thanks for your de-yellow info.? Mine must have seen a lot of sun exposure. It's as yellow as a turn signal lense.?
Over, Rudy?
kc5yl??
Gosh, Thank you for that Mike as I had not the heart to tell Rudy that I've never had or seen an SX-100 S meter cover that wasn't yellowed!
And now I will be able to clear the covers on the two that I have that are quite yellowed.
I'm recent to this group so missed and didn't know to look for something about meter covers.
Best d
Note to Rudy, kc5yl --
Hello Rudy!
I failed to keep your email address, so my apologies for sending this to the group.
If your SX-100 meter lens is yellowed but otherwise in good shape, please take a look at “Retro-Brite,” a spray that restores yellowed plastic.? It’s available from many sources, including Amazon.?
Recently there was a flurry of exchanges about ways to de-yellow plastic, most of which revolved around hydrogen peroxide and sunlight, with some augmentation chemicals added in for good measure.
You should be able to restore the “yellow-free” nature of the plastic with little effort!
Good luck a& 73!
Mike/ K5MGR _____________________________________________ ? Mike Langner NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@...
?
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Re: Parting out an SX-100
Donald and Mike.? ?Thanks for your de-yellow info.? Mine must have seen a lot of sun exposure. It's as yellow as a turn signal lense.?
Over, Rudy?
kc5yl??
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Gosh, Thank you for that Mike as I had not the heart to tell Rudy that I've never had or seen an SX-100 S meter cover that wasn't yellowed!
And now I will be able to clear the covers on the two that I have that are quite yellowed.
I'm recent to this group so missed and didn't know to look for something about meter covers.
Best d
Note to Rudy, kc5yl --
Hello Rudy!
I failed to keep your email address, so my apologies for sending this to the group.
If your SX-100 meter lens is yellowed but otherwise in good shape, please take a look at “Retro-Brite,” a spray that restores yellowed plastic.? It’s available from many sources, including Amazon.?
Recently there was a flurry of exchanges about ways to de-yellow plastic, most of which revolved around hydrogen peroxide and sunlight, with some augmentation chemicals added in for good measure.
You should be able to restore the “yellow-free” nature of the plastic with little effort!
Good luck a& 73!
Mike/ K5MGR _____________________________________________ ? Mike Langner 929 Alameda Road NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@...
?
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Re: Parting out an SX-100
Gosh, Thank you for that Mike as I had not the heart to tell Rudy that I've never had or seen an SX-100 S meter cover that wasn't yellowed!
And now I will be able to clear the covers on the two that I have that are quite yellowed.
I'm recent to this group so missed and didn't know to look for something about meter covers.
Best d
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Show quoted text
Note to Rudy, kc5yl --
Hello Rudy!
I failed to keep your email address, so my apologies for sending this to the group.
If your SX-100 meter lens is yellowed but otherwise in good shape, please take a look at “Retro-Brite,” a spray that restores yellowed plastic.? It’s available from many sources, including Amazon.?
Recently there was a flurry of exchanges about ways to de-yellow plastic, most of which revolved around hydrogen peroxide and sunlight, with some augmentation chemicals added in for good measure.
You should be able to restore the “yellow-free” nature of the plastic with little effort!
Good luck a& 73!
Mike/ K5MGR _____________________________________________ ? Mike Langner 929 Alameda Road NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@...
?
|
Re: Parting out an SX-100
Note to Rudy, kc5yl --
Hello Rudy!
I failed to keep your email address, so my apologies for sending this to the group.
If your SX-100 meter lens is yellowed but otherwise in good shape, please take a look at “Retro-Brite,” a spray that restores yellowed plastic.? It’s available from many sources, including Amazon.?
Recently there was a flurry of exchanges about ways to de-yellow plastic, most of which revolved around hydrogen peroxide and sunlight, with some augmentation chemicals added in for good measure.
You should be able to restore the “yellow-free” nature of the plastic with little effort!
Good luck a& 73!
Mike/ K5MGR _____________________________________________ ? Mike Langner 929 Alameda Road NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@...
?
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Re: Parting out an SX-100
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On Tue, Jun 11, 2024 at 11:48?AM Rudy Littrell via <kc5yl.radio= [email protected]> wrote: Donald,? ?I need a clear unyellowed meter lense for a SX-100. Do you have one??
Over, Rudy Littrell?
kc5yl??
Let me know what you want and a small amount for it/them along with a reasonable shipping cost ... If you have a picture of the specific item(s) - that helps nail it for me. Best Donald
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Re: Parting out an SX-100
Donald,? ?I need a clear unyellowed meter lense for a SX-100. Do you have one??
Over, Rudy Littrell?
kc5yl??
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Let me know what you want and a small amount for it/them along with a reasonable shipping cost ... If you have a picture of the specific item(s) - that helps nail it for me. Best Donald
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Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
The ANC-4 by Timewave is a very effective device for limiting local noise. ?I get more than 40dB reduction, sometimes more, so that weak signals stand out against an almost silent background. ?MFJ makes a similar device. ?These devices use an active RF circuit to amplify the offending noise from a separate antenna, and then beat it against the same noise in your main antenna. ?They really work. I see some used ones online around 125 bucks. ?
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On Jun 10, 2024, at 1:52 PM, Maynard Wright, P. E., W6PAP via < ma.wright@...> wrote:
The use of a noise antenna and associated circuitry is independent of the nature of the noise, whether or not it's periodic and whether or not it's random. Ideally, the signal antenna would receive the signal plus the offending noise and the noise antenna would receive just the noise. The combining network would be adjusted to combine the two signals so that their time domain noise components would be equal in amplitude but opposite in polarity so that they would cancel and leave only the desired signal at the input to the receiver. There are several potential difficulties that make this system less than perfect in most, if not all, implementations, but it may reduce the noise enough to be useful in some situations. 73, Maynard W6PAP On 6/9/24 17:11, Mike Feher wrote: It seems to me, that since noise is neither correlate-able or stochastic, elimination is not possible. Also the multiple antenna theory is out the window since RF generated noise travels at the speed of light. 73 – Mike
Mike B. Feher, N4FS
89 Arnold Blvd.
Howell NJ 07731
908-902-3831
*From:* [email protected] <[email protected]> *On Behalf Of *Maynard Wright, P. E., W6PAP via *Sent:* Sunday, June 9, 2024 7:31 PM *To:* [email protected] *Subject:* Re: [HallicraftersRadios] SX-117 noise limiter behavior
Another technique for reducing or eliminating noise was to introduce local noise to the front end of a receiver from a local "noise antenna." The amplitude and phase of that noise could be adjusted to, hopefully, cancel the noise received by the signal antenna.
Early BC-342 and BC-312 receivers featured a noise suppression circuit of this type. War Department TM 11-850 states that the noise antenna was intended to eliminate ignition noise when the receiver was mounted in a vehicle.
By the time my BC-342-N was born (1942), the noise antenna and associated circuitry were omitted, so that circuit may not have worked well. The September, 1946 revision of the TM notes that spare parts were no longer available for the noise suppression circuit and recommends removing it if any of the components fail.
MFJ has featured at least one similar unit, the MFJ-1026, which is now listed as sold out. There are other such units available but I have no experience with them.
73,
Maynard W6PAP
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Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
The use of a noise antenna and associated circuitry is independent of the nature of the noise, whether or not it's periodic and whether or not it's random.
Ideally, the signal antenna would receive the signal plus the offending noise and the noise antenna would receive just the noise. The combining network would be adjusted to combine the two signals so that their time domain noise components would be equal in amplitude but opposite in polarity so that they would cancel and leave only the desired signal at the input to the receiver.
There are several potential difficulties that make this system less than perfect in most, if not all, implementations, but it may reduce the noise enough to be useful in some situations.
73,
Maynard W6PAP
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On 6/9/24 17:11, Mike Feher wrote: It seems to me, that since noise is neither correlate-able or stochastic, elimination is not possible. Also the multiple antenna theory is out the window since RF generated noise travels at the speed of light. 73 – Mike
Mike B. Feher, N4FS
89 Arnold Blvd.
Howell NJ 07731
908-902-3831
*From:* [email protected] <[email protected]> *On Behalf Of *Maynard Wright, P. E., W6PAP via groups.io *Sent:* Sunday, June 9, 2024 7:31 PM *To:* [email protected] *Subject:* Re: [HallicraftersRadios] SX-117 noise limiter behavior
Another technique for reducing or eliminating noise was to introduce local noise to the front end of a receiver from a local "noise antenna." The amplitude and phase of that noise could be adjusted to, hopefully, cancel the noise received by the signal antenna.
Early BC-342 and BC-312 receivers featured a noise suppression circuit of this type. War Department TM 11-850 states that the noise antenna was intended to eliminate ignition noise when the receiver was mounted in a vehicle.
By the time my BC-342-N was born (1942), the noise antenna and associated circuitry were omitted, so that circuit may not have worked well. The September, 1946 revision of the TM notes that spare parts were no longer available for the noise suppression circuit and recommends removing it if any of the components fail.
MFJ has featured at least one similar unit, the MFJ-1026, which is now listed as sold out. There are other such units available but I have no experience with them.
73,
Maynard W6PAP
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A little research to remind me, "flint glass" is made with lead, the lead forms an unbreakable bond with the other ingredients so can't come out in food or drink. Glass generally is divided into "flint" and "crown" glass, with defined optical properties dividing them. Flint glass was originally made with powdered flint but later with lead which gives great clarity to the glass and makes it sparkle.
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On 6/10/2024 7:55 PM, Richard Knoppow wrote: FWIW, baking is chemistry. Time and temp are critical. You must correct for altitude. I have friends who think cooking is NOT chemistry; they are wrong. At least basic cooking. Choice of spices, etc., are a matter of judgement. My brother (SK) was a fine baker, my mom (also SK) was a superb cook. I am pretty good with fairly simple stuff. Now off to din-din with a friend. Just Denny's, they give an AARP discount.
On 6/10/2024 7:29 PM, don Root wrote:
Most cooks bake stuff until it’s good and tasty, usually not baked in fine crystal. that’s all I know!
"Crystal" glass used to have lead in it. Some question about whether it came out in food.
-- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998
-- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998
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FWIW, baking is chemistry. Time and temp are critical. You must correct for altitude. I have friends who think cooking is NOT chemistry; they are wrong. At least basic cooking. Choice of spices, etc., are a matter of judgement. My brother (SK) was a fine baker, my mom (also SK) was a superb cook. I am pretty good with fairly simple stuff. Now off to din-din with a friend. Just Denny's, they give an AARP discount. On 6/10/2024 7:29 PM, don Root wrote: Most cooks bake stuff until it’s good and tasty, usually not baked in fine crystal. that’s all I know! "Crystal" glass used to have lead in it. Some question about whether it came out in food. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998
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Most cooks bake stuff until it’s good and tasty, usually not baked in fine crystal. that’s all I know! ?
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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Richard Knoppow Sent: Monday, June 10, 2024 8:13 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [HallicraftersRadios] Baking Crystals? Baking crystals to restore them has been described on this and several other lists but I can't find any details. I need to know the temperature or at least the limit. Does anyone here know? -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998 -- don??? va3drl
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Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
See the Collins 136B-2, used with the KWM-2 for details. This uses a separate antenna such as the broadcast receiver whip, as a noise antenna. FWIW, for the other meaning, i.e. a squelch, while they are mostly found on FM receivers there are some HF communication receivers that have them. These are used to eliminate noise between periodic communications.
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On 6/10/2024 5:34 PM, Richard Knoppow wrote: Drake R4B and some other models. Also, Collins used a blanker with separate antenna in some transceivers, have to look at the specs to jog my memory.
On 6/10/2024 5:20 PM, Jim Whartenby via groups.io wrote:
I've looked and have not found a radio that uses a noise blanker. All I have seen is clippers which remove noise spikes above a set level.? The guitar guys mention it but it is a squelch gate which is open below a set value and closes above this set level.? So audio is muted for very low passages; one assumes to remove background hiss. Regards, JIm
-- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998
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Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
I always heard them called "duckers" although a ducker is really a special application. I agree, a different animal.
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On 6/10/2024 5:37 PM, Mike Langner wrote: Noise blankers in Amateur Radio and in commercial sound installations – two very different animals!
Yes, noise blankers, typically called audio noise gates, are quite common in performed music and in broadcasting.? I’ve built a number of studios for talk radio that use several microphones feeding a mic mixer that automatically mutes any mic that nobody’s talking into at the moment.? Here’s a typical example: <> of one kind I’ve installed with great success.? There are also individual mic processors that perform the same task along with compression, equalization, and other voice enhancements: <> .? I would expect to find some of these among the AM aficionados that use converted AM broadcast transmitters and inhabit 3885 and vicinity.
In PA systems they’re great at stopping feedback when a person stops talking and a compressor might otherwise raise the gain to the point of feedback “howling.”
These are completely different from noise blankers that we use on HF for receive signal noise reduction.? The kind of noise blankers that reduce ignition and similar noises typically cut off the IF or RF signal in the receiver when a separate receiver and antenna receives the impulse noise that we desire to be reduced.
Is there a version that works within a single receiver?? Yes, although its effect isn’t quite a great as the two antenna and receiver version. Info on the single on-frequency version, sometimes called a noise silencer, can be found here: <> .
Incidentally, they also work well for lightning static.
For typical background hiss, atmospheric static, and the like, they’re practically worthless.
And now I’ll just fade back into the background noise!
Interesting stuff!
Mike/ K5MGR ___________________________
Mike Langner 929 Alameda Road NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@... <mailto:mlangner@...>
-- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998
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Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
Noise blankers in Amateur Radio and in commercial sound installations – two very different animals!
Yes, noise blankers, typically called audio noise gates, are quite common in performed music and in broadcasting.? I’ve built a number of studios for talk radio that use several microphones feeding a mic mixer that automatically mutes any mic that nobody’s talking into at the moment.? Here’s a typical example: of one kind I’ve installed with great success.? There are also individual mic processors that perform the same task along with compression, equalization, and other voice enhancements: .? I would expect to find some of these among the AM aficionados that use converted AM broadcast transmitters and inhabit 3885 and vicinity.
In PA systems they’re great at stopping feedback when a person stops talking and a compressor might otherwise raise the gain to the point of feedback “howling.”
These are completely different from noise blankers that we use on HF for receive signal noise reduction.? The kind of noise blankers that reduce ignition and similar noises typically cut off the IF or RF signal in the receiver when a separate receiver and antenna receives the impulse noise that we desire to be reduced.
Is there a version that works within a single receiver?? Yes, although its effect isn’t quite a great as the two antenna and receiver version.? Info on the single on-frequency version, sometimes called a noise silencer, can be found here: .
Incidentally, they also work well for lightning static.
For typical background hiss, atmospheric static, and the like, they’re practically worthless.
And now I’ll just fade back into the background noise!
Interesting stuff!
Mike/ K5MGR ___________________________
Mike Langner 929 Alameda Road NW Albuquerque, NM 87114-1901
(505) 898-3212 home/home office (505) 238-8810 cell mlangner@...
|
Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
Drake R4B and some other models. Also, Collins used a blanker with separate antenna in some transceivers, have to look at the specs to jog my memory.
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On 6/10/2024 5:20 PM, Jim Whartenby via groups.io wrote: I've looked and have not found a radio that uses a noise blanker.? All I have seen is clippers which remove noise spikes above a set level.? The guitar guys mention it but it is a squelch gate which is open below a set value and closes above this set level.? So audio is muted for very low passages; one assumes to remove background hiss. Regards, JIm
-- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998
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Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
I've looked and have not found a radio that uses a noise blanker.? All I have seen is clippers which remove noise spikes above a set level.? The guitar guys mention it but it is a squelch gate which is open below a set value and closes above this set level.? So audio is muted for very low passages; one assumes to remove background hiss. Regards, JIm
Logic: Method used to arrive at the wrong conclusion, with confidence.? Murphy
Thanks jim, but first, is/has this topic swung to dealing with ignition noise only?? For an SX-117 ??? . interesting discussiuons, but what is the scope of it? Help..I’M lost??? …. again. don ?
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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jim Whartenby via groups.io Sent: Monday, June 10, 2024 3:58 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [HallicraftersRadios] SX-117 noise limiter behavior ? Read the enclosed excerpt from TM 11-310.? The first page shows the noise antenna circuit and lists all design changes to the series of receivers.? I would think that the noise antenna would be short so as to only pick up ignition noise.? Anything longer would subtract form the signal of interest. Logic: Method used to arrive at the wrong conclusion, with confidence.? Murphy On Monday, June 10, 2024 at 01:55:22 PM CDT, don Root <drootofallevil@...> wrote: Maynard, your theory sounds mostly good, but we need some details on what is called an antenna; will it work with my 10 feet of haywire antenna? ? ? The operation of a noise antenna and associated circuitry are independent of the nature of the noise, whether or not it's periodic and whether or not it's random.
Ideally, the signal antenna would receive the signal plus the offending noise and the noise antenna would receive just the noise. The combining network would be adjusted to combine the two signals so that their time domain noise components would be equal in amplitude but opposite in polarity so that they would cancel and leave only the desired signal at the input to the receiver.
There are several potential difficulties that make this system less than perfect in most, if not all, implementations, but it may reduce the noise enough to be useful in some situations.
73,
Maynard W6PAP -- don??? va3drl
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Baking crystals to restore them has been described on this and several other lists but I can't find any details. I need to know the temperature or at least the limit. Does anyone here know? -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL SKCC 19998
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Re: SX-117 noise limiter behavior
Thanks jim, but first, is/has this topic swung to dealing with ignition noise only?? For an SX-117 ??? . interesting discussiuons, but what is the scope of it? Help..I’M lost??? …. again. don ?
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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jim Whartenby via groups.io Sent: Monday, June 10, 2024 3:58 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [HallicraftersRadios] SX-117 noise limiter behavior? Read the enclosed excerpt from TM 11-310.? The first page shows the noise antenna circuit and lists all design changes to the series of receivers.? I would think that the noise antenna would be short so as to only pick up ignition noise.? Anything longer would subtract form the signal of interest. Logic: Method used to arrive at the wrong conclusion, with confidence.? Murphy On Monday, June 10, 2024 at 01:55:22 PM CDT, don Root <drootofallevil@...> wrote: Maynard, your theory sounds mostly good, but we need some details on what is called an antenna; will it work with my 10 feet of haywire antenna? ? ? The operation of a noise antenna and associated circuitry are independent of the nature of the noise, whether or not it's periodic and whether or not it's random.
Ideally, the signal antenna would receive the signal plus the offending noise and the noise antenna would receive just the noise. The combining network would be adjusted to combine the two signals so that their time domain noise components would be equal in amplitude but opposite in polarity so that they would cancel and leave only the desired signal at the input to the receiver.
There are several potential difficulties that make this system less than perfect in most, if not all, implementations, but it may reduce the noise enough to be useful in some situations.
73,
Maynard W6PAP -- don??? va3drl
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Re: SR-2000 Huricane Restoration complete.
Lovely!
73/jeff/ac0c
alpha-charlie-zero-charlie
On 6/11/2024 4:08 AM, W7WRX wrote:
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Just wanted to say thank you to Jim K9AXN, Walt and the rest who
helped me along the way!? ?The radio is finished and really runs
and looks great!
It was a massive amount of work to get the rig back to factory
specs:
New caps in radio and PS
20 something resistors changed in radio and PS
Mica Caps and caps in VFO changed.
Carrier Null circuit had to be rebuilt with all new parts.
Ceramic band switch BLOWN to bits. Had to take it apart, drill
rivets and replace contacts (NOT FUN)
Impossible to find NPO trimmers located and replaced.
Mechanical gears on VFO off alignment (another fun job)
Annoying 40 cycle offset on TX fixed
FULL alignment.
Cleaning of chassis, panel, knobs.
Tubes replaced
Fan serviced
Cabinets stripped and powder coated.
All new SS hardware.
Had new P2000 rear panels made at a sign shop.
Its very stable. It does not require adjustment of VFO in an
evening of use.? If turned on and left to run 20 minutes its back
exactly to the cycle it was when you turned it off.? Remember, I
have two SR2000s. The second one should be finished this week. I
am waiting on parts. It had the exact same treatment.? One will be
sold.? I don't care which one I keep. They are the same. If you
want one please let me know.? Its in PHX AZ and I would hate to
ship the PS. I guess it could be done somehow.
Some videos of it running:
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