Greetings,

I had noticed that my UV5R was taking too long to charge up the battery.
The red light was still on at the base of the charger after charging all
night (turns green when charged) and the little battery symbol on the
display was showing empty.

The wall wart was putting out 10 Volts dc so that was OK.  The spring
terminals that contact the battery in the base only had 5 Volts so it was
determined that the problem was in the charging stand.  (5 Volts will not
charge an 8 Volt battery regardless of wishful thinking and hoping.  --Duh!)

Was it possible to dis-assemble the charging base?  Yes!  It required the
application of a #1 Phillips screwdriver to remove all four screws and
separate the bottom cover.  And what did I observe then?  Horrors!!
Surface Mount Device (SMD) components, part of the reason that I retired
from the repair industry.  They are hard to see when your eyes get older.
But it is still possible to solder regular discrete components in their
place if room permits and there was plenty of room, so my hope endured.

Noticing that there appeared to be some through-hole components I removed
the circuit board and looked at the other side.  There were only three
parts on that side, a diode, an LED and an electrolytic capacitor.  Looking
more closely I noticed that one leg of the diode was slightly greenish in
color.  Upon touching the diode the leg crumbled from corrosion.  Progress!

Why would there be corrosion to the extent of crumbling the leg of a
component?  It came from the electrolytic capacitor close by!  And indeed
the capacitor was also corroding.

To sum up this anecdote, after replacing the diode with a diode rectifier
from a junked out VCR power supply that also furnished a replacement
capacitor the base was re-assembled and full functionality was restored.

The capacitor was a 10 microfarad at 25 Volts.
The diode was a 4001 so any regular diode would do.
The circuit board was well marked with polarity and identification on both
sides.

Oh, by the way, of the three spring terminals that contact the battery the
center one is electrically unused.  The charger will measure 8.02 Volts dc
when plugged in when measured at these terminals.

Sorry for being so long-winded, but I wanted to furnish enough detail that
follow-up questions could be minimized.

73,
Forgetful John, KI5HOC
________________________________________________
Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club

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