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1935 GE Model A-53 AM/SW Tombstone Radio
Hello everyone this past weekend I picked up at one of my favorite antique shops near me a 1935 GE Model A-53 AM/SW tombstone radio that needed some work done to it (it was missing the power cord, had a blown out flexible Resistor R-11 a 450 ohm 1W Flexible Resistor, some bad capacitors a bad tube and an incorrect rectifier tube).
I've got the radio completely recapped but dummy me forgot to order a replacement resistor for the blown out Flexible Resistor, which I would assume a 470 Ohm 1 Watt Flameproof resistor would work in place of the old flexible resistor? Thanks for your help. |
#2
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I have one just like it! It's a strange non-AVC superhet, with the volume control that isn't in the detector circuit. |
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Is it common for those old flexible resistors to just blow apart? I'm asking because this resistor's outer cloth shell was completely disintigrated and all that was left was the resistor's wire element which then shorted to the chassis and left a burn mark on the chassis where it shorted to the chassis! Also as for the replacement resistor I did come across in my parts stash 2 270 Ohm 2 watt flameproof resistors that I tied together in series to make a 540 Ohm 2 watt resistor (the original resistor had no tolerance markings listed so I figured that that would be close enough. the original 6A8 tube (this radio had all metal cased tubes which were brand new at that time) was completely dead according to my tube testers (I tested it on my Knight Model 600 Tube Tester, my Sencore Mighty Mite VII Tube Tester and on a B & K Model 606/666 Tube Tester and all three of them tested the tube as bad/zero emissions), thankfully I had a NOS 6A8GT tube that I was able to stick in there, hopefully it won't affect the performance of the radio with it not being a metal cased tube like the rest of the tubes. You said this radio doesn't have AVC or a standard Volume Control configuration, how does this radio perform compared to others in your opinion? I like to use these radios for Night Time DX'ing. |
#4
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Regarding the flexible resistor, they all crumbled after so many years. I would use two resistors to equal a value closer to 450-470 ohms. When DXing with a TRF or a non-AVC superhet, you have to have the volume control set to max, to have the sensitivity to seek out distant stations. If the radio squeals or motorboats, you might have to use a tube shield on the 6A8GT. |
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when I have the original 6A8 metal tube in the radio it doesn't do anything (no audio or anything) but then when I turn off the radio I can hear my signal generator coming through loud and clear and undistorted (no hum/motorboating), which tells me that they wired this radio up so that it could only use metal cased tubes I think... As for the resistors, I already have the 2 270 ohm 2 watt reistors installed in the radio, and I don't really want to have to go back in and remove it and reinstall new ones again as it was a pain in the butt to install them the first time around, is there any sort of problem with having a resistor that's 70 ohms higher than the original? The original resistor as I said previously didn't have any sort of tolerance listing listed for it in the Rider's Service Data which usually means its at least 20% tolerance or more, and 20% of 470 is 94 ohms which means that 540 Ohms is well within the original specs... Last edited by vortalexfan; 07-03-2021 at 12:46 PM. |
Audiokarma |
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If your crafty you can make a temporary shield out of aluminum foil to use till you can find an appropriate original...
__________________
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 |
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I was able to jury rig a tall octal tube shield by cutting it down so that it was the appropriate height and it still seems to be having issues with motorboating when a signal is applied to it with my signal generator, it basically just hums like mad when a signal is fed through the radio, either through the grid of the 6A8 tube or through the antenna wires, and the hum goes away when you tune away from the signal, and also the hum gets louder or softer depending on how you adjust the gridcaps on the 6K7 and 6J7 tubes, any ideas as to what might be going on here?
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#8
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Also, was any component drastically relocated in the convertor or IF circuit? The servicing instructions state that the set could be unstable under certain conditions. Maybe you have to wait until you can obtain a metal 6A8. |
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Sounds like there might be a 'floating grid' condition with the 6A8. That's when the DC path to the control grid is open (like an open in the RF coil or bandswitch). What resistance do you measure from the grid cap to ground?
(Since there's no AVC bus, the coil ties directly to ground according to the schematic.) |
Audiokarma |
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I have since removed the series 270 Ohm 2 Watt resistors and replaced it with a 270 ohm 2 watt and a 180 ohm 2 watt resistor in series to make a 450 Ohm 2 Watt resistor.
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Other than that when I replaced old capacitors and resistors I put them back where they were originally in the circuit (I completely unsoldered each capacitor from their respective tie points and soldered the new capacitors back in where the old ones connected originally). The only components I relocated were the two 8 MFD electrolytic can caps that were bad (the ones on top of the chassis), I disconnected the components from the old capacitor leads, and then took a terminal strip with a blank mounting tab (mounting tab with no terminal attached) and soldered it to the terminal on the old can cap that way the components and the new capacitor was isolated from the old cap but was mounted in a convenient spot. I reattached the wires/components and the new capacitors to one of the isolated terminals on the newly attached terminal strip and attached the negative lead of the new capacitor to the chassis just like the old ones were, and I made sure that the leads from the new capacitors were as short as possible. The only other thing I can think of is that maybe when I installed the new wire leads for the grid caps on the 6A8 and 6K7 tubes I might of made the leads too long, but it was kind of hard to know how much lead to use especially on the 6K8 tube's grid cap lead because I had to go from under the IF can to the top of the 6K8 tube which is about 2 inches, and I think I may have cut about 3 inches of wire lead because I wasn't sure how much I needed for sure and I didn't want to cut myself too short. Could having too long of grid cap wire leads cause the issues I'm having? |
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Is that what its supposed to measure, or do I have the aforementioned "floating grid" issue you spoke of? |
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You seem to get some, not-to-common sets to repair, restore! |
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It's definitely not floating. A few (or several) ohms sounds right. Floating would be infinite resistance.
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Audiokarma |
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