Anthony,

I've worked with a few micors and replacing the receiver is simply remove
the old one, insert the new one and tune.

For stand alone I prefer the micor receiver housing.  Usually have to build
a power supply for the receiver wants 9.6 and 13.8 volts.  If you are
connecting to unified chassis there is most often a connector on the card
cage board for adding up to 2 receivers.  It will take any band of Micor. 
Seems that Motorola stuck with its receiver accross most if not all of its
Mocor line.  The transmitters changed alot.

One thing I have found for VHF most Micors were built for 150-160 MHz range
due to commerical service needs in USA.  Gov and Canada used 140-150.  This
often required mods to the helical.  Simply replacing the 10-32 screw lugs
with regular screws with head inside the helical made it tune down to 140
MHz range.  Don't know what its skirts looked like, but did work well.

73, ron, n9ee/r












 
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