Good Day,
    This weekend, as the twenty meter segment of the Elecraft CW Net was 
getting under way, my K2/100 went a little crazy.  After sending for about one 
minute the relays started chattering, the keyer response was in no way related 
to paddle input, and upon later reports my signal went from a fine tone to a 
hiss.  During the short time of reliable sending I responded to Tom's (N0SS) 
kind offer to take the net with a series of Cs and went QRT.  I was forced to 
use a lesser rig :( to run the 40 meter net.  My Icom 706 is not the best at 
full QSK with its relays clacking in my ear and the sidetone fixed to the AF 
Gain level.  The filter in no way resembles the response I get with my K2's 
filter choices.  
    In between nets I pulled the amplifier off and found the culprit.  Here is 
where we segue back so put on a good Jim Reeves album or one by my favorite: 
Marty Robbins.  This is the time for a good ballad telling the tale of missteps 
in one's life.  Set the dial on Professor Peabody's Way Back machine to the 
recent QRP to the Field and the place to Bald Mountain State Park.  N7NLU and I 
are working the contest with our Elecraft rigs.  He, of course, is doing much 
better than I but we both had fun until the downpour told us to pack up our 
things.  As I drove back toward Banks the winds were so strong they were 
slowing my F250 significantly.  The downpour was making visibility quite poor.  
But both the gear and I returned home safely.
    As I was drying myself by the fire and talking with Sam (the cat) I started 
rewinding the antennas in the correct disposition and unpacking the hastily 
stowed gear.  Wandering into the shack I sat and found the screwdriver to 
replace the original top with its ATU with the amplifier top.  Here is where 
the story may provide clues so stay awake :)  I found a couple of text books 
and set them under the inverted amplifier.  Then I proceeded to poke plug A 
onto pin B all the way from the front to the back of the rig.  Since dinner was 
next on the agenda the inspection faze of the rebuild was cursory at best.  
WARNING: don't do this at your shack!!  And so on to dinner.
    The next day's nets and those the week after went well.  I got and gave 
good reports across the continent.  Well as good as could be expected under 
Spring storm conditions.  This brings us to Sunday the 28th and the 
commencement of the twenty meter net.  Since I've already related that part of 
the tale I'll not bore you with a coda.  I will jump to the problem staring me 
in the face when I inspected the AUX RF connection to the main RF board.  The 
inner wire of the coax's part of the plug had been pushed out of its normally 
seated state.  For the last few weeks I had been running in a potentially 
intermittent state.  I reseated the wire with its little brass thingie into the 
plug.  This did not solve my problem.  In fact I had lost all RF output from 
the amplifier.  At this point I could still hear with the rig.  Later I lost 
hearing as well.  
    On Monday I went to see Ron D'Eau Claire in Forest Grove.  We chatted for a 
while and I mentioned the sad state of my K2/100.  He aimed me at further tests 
and asked for a follow up email.  After all of my errands were done I walked 
through his measurements.  The finals were still alive to my surprise.  I had 
not smoked them as I had feared.  (This would not explain the deafness of my 
rig however.)  Further tests were necessary.  I pulled the AUX RF plug and the 
power to the amp.  Found a BNC to SO-239 adapter, a gel cell, and the barrel 
connector for the K2.  Most of this was still in my gear from the QRPTTF 
expedition.  The rig worked.  It could hear and it could transmit.  But, when I 
replaced the amplifier top's connections and ran the antenna through the SO-239 
on the amp it was deaf and dumb even at low power.   Hmmm... curious.  Emails 
to Ron and Don, W3FPR, provided me with a few more steps.  I took some of the 
readings but in checking the RF AUX connection for the umpteenth time I worried 
the shield connection to the point of failure.  
   At this point I decided it was better to get some rest before proceeding.  
Since the next day was a work day I was unable to complete the tests or repairs 
for quite some time.  Not a good day at the office while one is worried about 
their K2!  When I got home I had three projects: repair the OS on my computer, 
troubleshoot some electronics for work, and fix my K2.  Each of these was done 
in turn or simultaneously.  Since I had about thirty feet of RG-174 lying 
around I cut a new cable.  I did not have either the time nor the desire to 
pull the amp PCB off so I undid the connections from the part side and surface 
soldered the shield.  The inner wire connection wicked clean so  I was able to 
mount that through hole.  The brass parts in the Molex connecter were another 
story.  I did not want to risk deforming them into uselessness so I soldered 
the coax lead on top of the crimp.  I bent the connections out to increase the 
spring tension and plugged it back to the RF board.  
    Time for a test.  I pressed the go-start button starting off with very low 
power and was pleased to see the needles on my MFJ tuner bounce feebly.  I 
turned up to just shy of the amplifier turn on position and repeated the test.  
My SWR was a bit off into my dummy load so I retuned.  Turned the power up to 
fifty watts and was greeted by the relay clicking and the needles bouncing more 
vigorously.  Problem solved with a temporary fix.  ECN will run from my 
precious K2/100 again!
    Moral of the story?  Don't mix allusions with metaphors.  No, different 
story ;)  Make sure to inspect your connections closely and carefully after a 
QRP field trip involving top swapping.  Don't let dinner take time away from 
electronics!
   73,
       Kevin.   KD5ONS

PS.  Thanks to AC7AC, W3FPR, and N7NLU.  Karl, you were right, it was a simple 
fix.
    KJR
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