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Philco 77
I've got a Philco 77 in which someone replaced the speaker. It appears as if it's missing the field coil and is missing the center tap on the input of the output transformer. They somehow connected the wires weirdly, they hooked the outputs of the output transformer and the voice coil in series and then hooked that up to where the Field coil should be. Would this have worked?
The resistances of the speaker are as follows ~Voice Coil 5 ohms ~Output of transformer 0.5 ohms ~Input of transformer 855 ohms Here's a picture if you're as confused as I am 20181011_212205.jpg The blue and green go to the input of the trans The yellow and black should go to the field coil
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"If it isn't broke, you aren't trying hard enough" |
#2
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In case of a non-field coil speaker being used...I would replace the coil with a generic choke...and try to get a voice coil whose impedance closely matches the amp's output trannie.
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#3
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Are you sure that speaker does not have a field coil (it looks like there is cardboard in the magnet and some wires going to it)? Some field coil speakers had an extra winding on the field coil that was placed in series with the speaker...This extra winding picked up any hum from the field coil and fed it to the voice coil with reverse polarity to cancel the hum from the field coil.
If you need to sub a perm magnet speaker for a field coil type you can place a power resistor of comparable resistance to the old field coil in place of the field coil too...A choke will reduce hum more, but a resistor will work too if on a budget or in a pinch.
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
#4
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Well, I mixed up my terminology. I think I've confused the output transformer and the field coil. (Sorry about that still new to the hobby) What can I do about a missing output transformer?
This appears to be the speaker that I have. Philco 36-1450
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"If it isn't broke, you aren't trying hard enough" |
#5
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Look for a transformer with the correct primary topology (push pull or single ended depending on how many audio output tubes there are), Primary impedance (should roughly match plate resistance in output tube data sheet), secondary impedance (should match speaker voice coil impedance which is usually the same as voice coil resistance), and should be rated for the max audio power the radio is rated for (or the tubes are rated for if you can't find an audio power spec).
Note: not all radios regardless of speaker type (PM or field) mounted the audio output transformer on the speaker, some mounted it on the chassis instead. If the speaker was subbed and they were smart enough to wire the field coil correctly then they probably made sure an output transformer exists within the set.
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
Audiokarma |
#6
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#7
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Quote:
No output transformer that I can see, the 45's plates go directly to the speaker. Not sure if it ever worked, either way, can someone help me figure out the maximum wattage I'll need? The datasheet calls for like 18 watts max watts in a push pull configuration. http://www.hammondmfg.com/125H&J.htm The Hammond 125 series seems to suit the resistance needs fairly well This is the datasheet that I've been using https://frank.pocnet.net/sheets/021/4/45.pdf
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#8
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Quote:
(This design uses a dedicated field coil, whereas later designs made the field coil double as the choke). (Edit.) In your photo of the speaker, it looks like the speaker has been replaced with the later type that uses the field coil as choke. Notice the two black wires coming out of the field frame. Those go to a 'hum bucking' coil which is in series with the voice coil. It serves to null out the field's ripple. Your radio doesn't need hum bucking, since the field coil does not double as choke. So just take the HB coil out of circuit, and run the voice coil direct. Last edited by old_coot88; 10-12-2018 at 02:27 PM. |
#9
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Heres pictures of my chassis.
20181012_151551.jpg 20181012_151628.jpg The plates of the 45's go directly to the speaker plug. My understanding was that the output transformer was mounted on the speaker frame however, when they replaced the speaker, they bypassed any sort of output transformer and hooked it directly to the speaker. If you look at the schematic for the 77, you can see the plugs off of the 45 tubes and off of the field coil
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"If it isn't broke, you aren't trying hard enough" |
#10
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Push-pull amplifier. Requires tapped output transformer to speaker and field coil.
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Rick (Sparks) Ethridge |
Audiokarma |
#11
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Quote:
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#12
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My only other question is how do I determine the wattage I'll need?
This line seems to suit the demands given http://www.hammondmfg.com/125a.htm
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"If it isn't broke, you aren't trying hard enough" |
#13
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A 10 watt p-p should be just fine for your Philco.
Ed |
#14
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Well, I'm happy to report that I received the transformer today and promptly installed it. I'm also happy to report that I'm now receiving stations, though slightly garbled and with a high pitched whine. I'm assuming that aligning each section should fix the whine, though I'm not sure about the garble. (Weak output tubes maybe?)
Thanks for everyone's help, Zach
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"If it isn't broke, you aren't trying hard enough" |
#15
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You seem to be missing the large tube shield. This very well might be the cause of your issues. Also be advised that the input filter cap (inside the box from connections 2 to 6) should be a non polarized mylar 2mfd/630v. If you use an electrolytic cap it will short after a while do to the high ripple current at that point in the p/s.
Depending the style of the cabinet the original speaker would have looked like this one. https://www.ebay.com/itm/vintage-PHI...gji:rk:22:pf:0 GL Terry Last edited by 7"estatdef; 10-18-2018 at 11:16 PM. |
Audiokarma |
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