Quote:
Originally Posted by kg4cna
Hey guys/girls, I've been searching through the forums and the archive for info on the electrostatic tweeter that my Zenith C835R (as well as several other models) has. When I opened the case, both wires to the tweeter had been cut, leading me to believe the chassis has been removed before. I took some time today and hooked it back up. I had to use the only wire I had on hand at the time, some cheap 24 gauge speaker wire, to make the connections back to their original connection point. When I powered back up, all was fine...but I really can't tell if the tweeter is working. I can cup my hand around it while music is playing but really can't tell any difference. I "think" I can hear it...but I'm just not sure (maybe I'm going deaf). The tone control is set to the midway point. Does this tweeter really make a difference in the already great sound of these radios AND is it obvious if it's working like it should?
Thanks and this place is a great repository of knowledge! I still have alot of reading to do
Allen
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I have a Zenith K-731 with an electrostatic tweeter, and, like yourself, I'm not sure if it is working.
I'm not sure, either, if there is a way to tell whether or not the tweeter is operating as it should. This device is driven directly from the plate of the 35C5 audio output tube, so there
should be some output from the tweeter if it isn't damaged or otherwise defective.
I don't know why the former owner of your C835R cut the leads to the electrostat tweeter just to remove the chassis. On the K731, the cable to the tweeter plugs onto a terminal strip on the chassis; all one needs to do to disconnect the tweeter is disconnect the two plugs from the strip. (Most other models of these Zenith radios have a similar arrangement; for instance, in the C845 series, the leads from the tweeter connect to it by means of slip-on connectors.) The only thing I can think of with your 835R is that the tweeter may have, for whatever reason, been hard-wired to the chassis (or perhaps that model's tweeter was hard-wired to begin with), with the leads soldered to the terminal strip I mentioned.
The type of wire used to connect the tweeter shouldn't matter. For connecting a speaker (which is, after all, what the electrostatic tweeter is), speaker wire is just what is needed, although I would think any kind of wire would work just as well.