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#1
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GE 578 crackling
Hi, all, I hope this is the right forum to post my question:
GE 578 clock radio. Some years ago it used to work well for a time, then it would begin to crackle and produce unintelligible audio. I replaced the tubes today (I have more free time on my hands lately) and that brought it back to life, but it is still after a time popping and giving me garbled audio. It sounds good and loud when it works, but then it again begins to make nose. Could anyone give me a hunch where to begin troubleshooting? I have a photofact, but I'd rather not replace every component in the set if I could avoid it. Audio output transformer failure? Hard to tell from afar, I know, but I'd like to bring it back again. Clock still keeps perfect time. |
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#2
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Google the phrase "silver mica disease"
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#3
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When I was a kid, my dad would hand me a small plastic flip open display box with two IF cans in it, and point me to an AA5 (dad hated PC work). I changed a lot of them.
"Make sure you don't mix the two up when you install them!" "Okay dad"... ![]() John |
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#4
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Garbled audio usually is caused by bad (leaky) capacitors in the audio stages.
jr |
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#5
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If there is any 60Hz buzz or him in the audio you should change the electrolytic capacitors too.
AA5s usually have less than $15 worth of paper and electrolytic caps in them and those caps are time bombs... Better to change them as a preventative maintenance.
__________________
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 |
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#6
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Wiggle all the tubes to clean the contacts. But yeah, silver mica disease.
I have a 660 clock radio, I wonder how similar they are/ aren't. |
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