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#1
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I had weak audio on mine, did an audio alignment helped a lot. One thing to watch out for is the SAM may show the wrong coil right off the tuner, there is a top and a bottom adj, the SAM on mine was different from the Riders, the Riders was right.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fxayNcxB4Xs Last edited by DaveWM; 01-03-2015 at 10:24 PM. |
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#2
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Dave, Thanks for the link- very informative. Up until now I've been scared of any alignment procedures, as a lot of the sources (on the internet) say best not to touch, as you may only make a working set non-functional. In this case, I have nothing audio to lose. I also have the same Heathkit signal generator and my DVOM has a frequency function I can check it against. My signal generator has no leads, so I built some using shielded audio cable and test lead clips (Radio Shack is still useful for something outside of cell phones!).
One thing I didn't quite understand. You mention the connection between the signal generator and the tube on the tuner (we have the same tuners), but you mention putting cardboard by the tube shield to prevent grounding. I couldn't see how exactly you did this. Can you describe it? Bear in mind I'm a newbie here... Thanks! |
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#3
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You just want the tube shield not to be grounded, if you can keep it up a bit from the chassis, that is good, I think I used the cardboard to keep a strip of metal from touching the tube shield. The goal is to couple the signal thru the glass of the osc tube, the shield therefore must not come into contact with the chassis which would ground out the signal.
The hardest part of working IF for me is correct termination and cabling from gens to test equipment. You want short leads, and correct termination blocks (at least when looking at band pass from sweep gens). I think the tuner may have a defined test point that may work better than the tube shield, check the riders. I do think its not as critical when just doing a single freq peak (unlike the sweep gen and scope when you are trying to analyse a trace). and using the long fibreglass rod helps, just moving around the set can damp out signals and change tuning, you notice that as I peak up the last coil near the tuner. |
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#4
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A turn or two of hookup wire wrapped around the mixer tube, taped securely, is a good method of injection in lieu of the ungrounded tube shield, which may be prone to over-coupling.
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#5
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An update. I remembered that when I was working with this set a few years ago, I would get a better audio response from a VCR rather than a DTV converter. I connected up the VCR and with the contrast control all the way up, I could hear faint audio under the interference. Since the chassis is in the cabinet, I did a rough "ear alignment" (as Phil calls it) and was able to get a sizable increase in volume. (I only adjusted the top two coils, as the third is accessed from the bottom. I will adjust this one as well when I pull the chassis back out for the formal instrumented alignment) The first IF coil has a silver mica cap in it, while the second uses a tubular ceramic.
This reminded me of a quandry I was dealing with back then: If I used a DTV converter, I'd get a nice picture, but no sound. (Even with the contrast turned all the way up, which functions more as a gain control in this set, the sound is absent or very faint. The contrast is set around the middle of the range to get a good picture with no distortion or retrace lines.) If I used a VCR, the sound signal is stronger, but with the contrast dial turned to a point where the audio is a decent listening volume, the video is overdriven and distorted. I wish I could get the good video of the DTV, but the sound of the VCR... Any ideas as to what else I should be looking for? (Yes, I have the sound control on the DTV converter box turned up to the max) I also want to put a signal directly through the amplifier in the lower chassis and verify that nothing has weakened in the main amp itself. Last edited by UberVacTuber; 01-05-2015 at 07:30 PM. |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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Blonder Tonge AM60 modulator, far better than anything coming out of a VCR or converter box
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#7
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Blonder Tongue AM60 modulator, far better than anything coming out of a VCR or converter box
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