Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters
Jim, I have both blue and red LEDs on my TR7 s-meter. Kind of works, but leaves a red blush on the meter that makes the blue look strange. White LEDs and blue filter didn't do so good for me either. The B-line has less issue with only the pointer being red. I would be interested in hearing others' experiences in trying to recover the TR7 s-meter red with LED bulb replacements. 73, Ron WD8SBB --- On Sat, 4/16/11, Jim Shorney jshor...@inebraska.com wrote: From: Jim Shorney jshor...@inebraska.com Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters To: drakel...@.zerobeat.net drakelist@zerobeat.net Date: Saturday, April 16, 2011, 12:04 PM On Sat, 16 Apr 2011 11:14:53 -0400, Mike Williams wrote: I changed my 4C and 7 line to these LED kits and they look great, generate less heat and consume much less power. I purchased the kits on line and they were very reasonable, try a search and you will find the supplier Or, you can build your own: http://radiojim.exofire.net/pages/blue.html There is a list of kit suppliers at the bottom of the page as well. In retrospect, I may try retrofitting a small red LED to my creation to bring out the red highlights in the S-Meter. The monochromtic blue LEDs obliterate the red color completely. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED!
Dennis - Good to know. That's why I always 'try' to measure voltages on component leads themselves. Unfortunately, this isn't always possible. Sockets and connections are the bane of any solid state stuff. I feel better about my general rule that if a Base-Emitter junction is good, there's a reasonable chance the transistor is also good.! :-) Collector-Base breakdown DOES happen, but blown B-E is a lot more common. Thanks for checking that one Dennis. 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Drake 2-B, 2-C/2-NT, 4-A, 4-B, C-Line and TR-4/C Service Supplement CDs www.k4oah.com Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, I received your Q7 transistor in the mail and tested it on a Tek 576 curve tracer. Surprise! It's actually in good shape. Perhaps you had a marginal solder joint and the act of replacing the transistor curved the problem. I'll return the transistor to you so you can either stick it back in there or keep it as a spare. Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 9:12 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: Dennis, I still have it here. I think I will do that...it may help the group. This was tough as the Q7 was working just barely conducting so we were looking at all the cicuitry around it. Garey as always was right on as to the voltages I should have,,BUT I just could noyt find out why they were off...way off. Q7 itself was the culptrit! Are you good in QRZ? I'll send it to you... Man..that R-4b is a hot rod now...the full LAB alignment does take quite a bit of time, but I think it was worth it.. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com mailto:dennis.montice...@gmail.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com Cc: k4oah k4...@mindspring.com mailto:k4...@mindspring.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net mailto:drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 10:55 pm Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Congrats, Lee. If you're curious about the failure mode of the bad transistor you can mail it to me and I will put it on a Tek 576 curve tracer and tell the group what's wrong with it. Probably it already sleeps with the coffee grinds :-) Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 4:44 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: BINGO! Just as Dr. Barrell said Q7 Collector= 8 v Base = .6 Emitter = .02 And Audio is the wanderful Drake audio of all time! I guess Q7 was not blown, but had a high resistance emitter to base or something like that. Usually on transistors my experience is it either works or it doesn't. I guess it ain't so. I learned a lot shooting this bug and I couild not have done it without you Garey! So many thanks indeed... Thanks for hanging in there with me. Actuallythis was fun. Wait until my friend hears his R-4B now! He will understand just why we love em! I'm buying you 2 cups of coffee at Dayton (Or something better if you want) 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com mailto:k4...@mindspring.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com Sent: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 6:29 pm Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? Either should work fine. Just watch the lead pattern! 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: Garey, I have the board out. I discovered I really did not swap the Q7...tired and late at night Hi HiI also noticed that the cap we discussed that is in the feedback is damaged some. I have another...so I am replacing the Q7 with a 2N3393 I have and that questionable cap now. Also...I have a radio shack MPSA I could use instead?? any preference? Lee Lee Simmonds Summit DCS LLC 260-799-4077 tel:260-799-4077 Office 260-403-6936 tel:260-403-6936 Cell -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com mailto:k4...@mindspring.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com Sent: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 5:48 pm Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? Lee - Do you have any input (tone) when you are measuring those levels? AF GAIN must be a zero to check DC. That collector voltage is still high. I was just playing with my breadboard version, and I have 18.5V DC and 8 V on the Collector. 14.5 V on the Collector says the transistor is still not drawing 'normal' current. Mine has 0.019V on the Emitter, and about 0.6 on the Base. I believe you have tried another Q7, perhaps just very low Beta? Have you disconnected the input and output capacitors? Less than 1M of 'pull-up' resistor is way too low, unless there is leakage current to ground, or the transistor Beta is
Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED!
Garey, all. The voltages were measured right on the leads (very carefully I might add, it's tight in there) And after I soldered in the new transistor it still failed...but, the next morning when I was more awake...I discovered I had picked up the SAME old transistor when I replaced it the night before. I know this to be true as it was in fact a 2N3394 (original). My replacement was to be a 2N3393 I had in stock. After I replaced the old with the new 2n3393it worked great. So, that transistor is badmaybe it is intermittent, but that would be rare for sure. Maybe it fails under current draw or certain voltage??? I could put it back in to see...but, that baby is working FB and I'm going to leave it alone. Anyways...my friend now loves his R-4B and we did EXTENSIVE RX tests with both his TT Orion I and my TT Orion II. In MOST cases the R-4B copyed weak DX BETTER than the new modern radios:-) That baby is HOT...and the audio is superb even at pretty high volumes. He commented that before my full alignment that was not the case...so, moral isif your R-4B is not hearing well spend some time on it as it SHOULD really kick BUTT 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com To: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com Cc: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 10:34 am Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Dennis - Good to know. That's why I always 'try' to measure voltages on component leads themselves. Unfortunately, this isn't always possible. Sockets and connections are the bane of any solid state stuff. I feel better about my general rule that if a Base-Emitter junction is good, there's a reasonable chance the transistor is also good.! :-) Collector-Base breakdown DOES happen, but blown B-E is a lot more common. Thanks for checking that one Dennis. 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Drake 2-B, 2-C/2-NT, 4-A, 4-B, C-Line and TR-4/C Service Supplement CDs www.k4oah.com Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, I received your Q7 transistor in the mail and tested it on a Tek 576 curve tracer. Surprise! It's actually in good shape. Perhaps you had a marginal solder joint and the act of replacing the transistor curved the problem. I'll return the transistor to you so you can either stick it back in there or keep it as a spare. Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 9:12 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: Dennis, I still have it here. I think I will do that...it may help the group. This was tough as the Q7 was working just barely conducting so we were looking at all the cicuitry around it. Garey as always was right on as to the voltages I should have,,BUT I just could noyt find out why they were off...way off. Q7 itself was the culptrit! Are you good in QRZ? I'll send it to you... Man..that R-4b is a hot rod now...the full LAB alignment does take quite a bit of time, but I think it was worth it.. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com mailto:dennis.montice...@gmail.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com Cc: k4oah k4...@mindspring.com mailto:k4...@mindspring.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net mailto:drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 10:55 pm Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Congrats, Lee. If you're curious about the failure mode of the bad transistor you can mail it to me and I will put it on a Tek 576 curve tracer and tell the group what's wrong with it. Probably it already sleeps with the coffee grinds :-) Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 4:44 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: BINGO! Just as Dr. Barrell said Q7 Collector= 8 v Base = .6 Emitter = .02 And Audio is the wanderful Drake audio of all time! I guess Q7 was not blown, but had a high resistance emitter to base or something like that. Usually on transistors my experience is it either works or it doesn't. I guess it ain't so. I learned a lot shooting this bug and I couild not have done it without you Garey! So many thanks indeed... Thanks for hanging in there with me. Actuallythis was fun. Wait until my friend hears his R-4B now! He will understand just why we love em! I'm buying you 2 cups of coffee at Dayton (Or something better if you want) 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com mailto:k4...@mindspring.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com Sent: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 6:29 pm Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? Either should work fine. Just watch the lead pattern! 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: Garey, I have the board out. I discovered I really did not swap the Q7...tired and late at night Hi HiI also noticed that the cap we discussed that is in the feedback is damaged some. I have another...so I am replacing the Q7 with a 2N3393 I have and that questionable
Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED!
Lee - The mystery deepens. :-) You were measuring just the static DC voltages, which is about the least demanding situation. Dennis... What Beta did you measure? This is the simplest Class A audio amp with a 2.2M 'pull-up' resistor C-B, an 82 ohm E resistor and a 47k C (load) resistor. As I recall the Base voltage was marginal, but such low currents not all that unusual. There was E voltage, but barely measurable. Any ideas??? Yes, I still say the 'B' was the epitome of the 4 Line receivers. Drake built about 12,000 of about the same design, and I think they had it pretty well figured out by the 'B'! :-) Yeah, the 'C' had fancy crystal filters, but those have their problems too. They certainly come in handy when things are really tight, but that doesn't happen much any more except on contest weekends. The 'B' is a much more pleasant sounding radio for day-to-day hamming. Just my opinion 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA kc9...@aol.com wrote: Garey, all. The voltages were measured right on the leads (very carefully I might add, it's tight in there) And after I soldered in the new transistor it still failed...but, the next morning when I was more awake...I discovered I had picked up the SAME old transistor when I replaced it the night before. I know this to be true as it was in fact a 2N3394 (original). My replacement was to be a 2N3393 I had in stock. After I replaced the old with the new 2n3393it worked great. So, that transistor is badmaybe it is intermittent, but that would be rare for sure. Maybe it fails under current draw or certain voltage??? I could put it back in to see...but, that baby is working FB and I'm going to leave it alone. Anyways...my friend now loves his R-4B and we did EXTENSIVE RX tests with both his TT Orion I and my TT Orion II. In MOST cases the R-4B copyed weak DX BETTER than the new modern radios:-) That baby is HOT...and the audio is superb even at pretty high volumes. He commented that before my full alignment that was not the case...so, moral isif your R-4B is not hearing well spend some time on it as it SHOULD really kick BUTT 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com To: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com Cc: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 10:34 am Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Dennis - Good to know. That's why I always 'try' to measure voltages on component leads themselves. Unfortunately, this isn't always possible. Sockets and connections are the bane of any solid state stuff. I feel better about my general rule that if a Base-Emitter junction is good, there's a reasonable chance the transistor is also good.! :-) Collector-Base breakdown DOES happen, but blown B-E is a lot more common. Thanks for checking that one Dennis. 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Drake 2-B, 2-C/2-NT, 4-A, 4-B, C-Line and TR-4/C Service Supplement CDs www.k4oah.com Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, I received your Q7 transistor in the mail and tested it on a Tek 576 curve tracer. Surprise! It's actually in good shape. Perhaps you had a marginal solder joint and the act of replacing the transistor curved the problem. I'll return the transistor to you so you can either stick it back in there or keep it as a spare. Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 9:12 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: Dennis, I still have it here. I think I will do that...it may help the group. This was tough as the Q7 was working just barely conducting so we were looking at all the cicuitry around it. Garey as always was right on as to the voltages I should have,,BUT I just could noyt find out why they were off...way off. Q7 itself was the culptrit! Are you good in QRZ? I'll send it to you... Man..that R-4b is a hot rod now...the full LAB alignment does take quite a bit of time, but I think it was worth it.. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com mailto:dennis.montice...@gmail.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com Cc: k4oah k4...@mindspring.com mailto:k4...@mindspring.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net mailto:drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 10:55 pm Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Congrats, Lee. If you're curious about the failure mode of the bad transistor you can mail it to me and I will put it on a Tek 576 curve tracer and tell the group what's wrong with it. Probably it already sleeps with the coffee grinds :-) Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 4:44 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: BINGO! Just as Dr. Barrell said Q7 Collector= 8 v Base = .6 Emitter = .02 And Audio is the wanderful Drake audio of all time! I guess Q7 was not blown, but had a high resistance emitter to base or something like that. Usually on transistors my experience is it either works or it
Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED!
Garey, And a very well respected opinion it is! 783, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com To: drakelist Drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 11:12 am Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Lee - The mystery deepens. :-) You were measuring just the static DC voltages, which is about the least demanding situation. Dennis... What Beta did you measure? This is the simplest Class A audio amp with a 2.2M 'pull-up' resistor C-B, an 82 ohm E resistor and a 47k C (load) resistor. As I recall the Base voltage was marginal, but such low currents not all that unusual. There was E voltage, but barely measurable. Any ideas??? Yes, I still say the 'B' was the epitome of the 4 Line receivers. Drake built about 12,000 of about the same design, and I think they had it pretty well figured out by the 'B'! :-) Yeah, the 'C' had fancy crystal filters, but those have their problems too. They certainly come in handy when things are really tight, but that doesn't happen much any more except on contest weekends. The 'B' is a much more pleasant sounding radio for day-to-day hamming. Just my opinion 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA kc9...@aol.com wrote: Garey, all. The voltages were measured right on the leads (very carefully I might add, it's tight in there) And after I soldered in the new transistor it still failed...but, the next morning when I was more awake...I discovered I had picked up the SAME old transistor when I replaced it the night before. I know this to be true as it was in fact a 2N3394 (original). My replacement was to be a 2N3393 I had in stock. After I replaced the old with the new 2n3393it worked great. So, that transistor is badmaybe it is intermittent, but that would be rare for sure. Maybe it fails under current draw or certain voltage??? I could put it back in to see...but, that baby is working FB and I'm going to leave it alone. Anyways...my friend now loves his R-4B and we did EXTENSIVE RX tests with both his TT Orion I and my TT Orion II. In MOST cases the R-4B copyed weak DX BETTER than the new modern radios:-) That baby is HOT...and the audio is superb even at pretty high volumes. He commented that before my full alignment that was not the case...so, moral isif your R-4B is not hearing well spend some time on it as it SHOULD really kick BUTT 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com To: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com Cc: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 10:34 am Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Dennis - Good to know. That's why I always 'try' to measure voltages on component leads themselves. Unfortunately, this isn't always possible. Sockets and connections are the bane of any solid state stuff. I feel better about my general rule that if a Base-Emitter junction is good, there's a reasonable chance the transistor is also good.! :-) Collector-Base breakdown DOES happen, but blown B-E is a lot more common. Thanks for checking that one Dennis. 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Drake 2-B, 2-C/2-NT, 4-A, 4-B, C-Line and TR-4/C Service Supplement CDs www.k4oah.com Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, I received your Q7 transistor in the mail and tested it on a Tek 576 curve tracer. Surprise! It's actually in good shape. Perhaps you had a marginal solder joint and the act of replacing the transistor curved the problem. I'll return the transistor to you so you can either stick it back in there or keep it as a spare. Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 9:12 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: Dennis, I still have it here. I think I will do that...it may help the group. This was tough as the Q7 was working just barely conducting so we were looking at all the cicuitry around it. Garey as always was right on as to the voltages I should have,,BUT I just could noyt find out why they were off...way off. Q7 itself was the culptrit! Are you good in QRZ? I'll send it to you... Man..that R-4b is a hot rod now...the full LAB alignment does take quite a bit of time, but I think it was worth it.. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com mailto:dennis.montice...@gmail.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com Cc: k4oah k4...@mindspring.com mailto:k4...@mindspring.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net mailto:drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Tue, Apr 5, 2011 10:55 pm Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Fwd: My R-4B audio? FIXED! Congrats, Lee. If you're curious about the failure mode of the bad transistor you can mail it to me and I will put it on a Tek 576 curve tracer and tell the group what's wrong with it. Probably it already sleeps with the coffee grinds :-) Dennis AE6C On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 4:44 PM, kc9...@aol.com mailto:kc9...@aol.com wrote: BINGO! Just as Dr. Barrell said Q7 Collector= 8
[Drakelist] Suspend emails
I've lost the info on how to temp suspend getting emails from the list. Can someone please remind me? Bob AG5X ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 07:10:37 -0700 (PDT), Ron wrote: I have both blue and red LEDs on my TR7 s-meter. Kind of works, but leaves a red blush on the meter that makes the blue look strange. White LEDs and blue filter didn't do so good for me either. The B-line has less issue with only the pointer being red. Even white LEDs produce monchromatic light. Attractive for some lighting applications, but not for others. To me the appear cold and sterile, yet I do use them in places where it doesn't matter (to me). From my perspective, the pure blue just looks way too cool in the 7-line and I really don't want to go back to incandescent (especially for that pesky VFO lamp). I plan to stick with incandescent in the older gear because LEDs just don't look right to me. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
[Drakelist] TR-4 'bouncing' S-Meter
Paul, Let me know how you make out. Both my TR-3 and 4 are very bouncy, but I hadn't bothered to track down the cause. KB8BKU Darryl in Dayton On Apr 15, 2011, at 2:53 PM, Garey Barrell wrote: Paul - Most likely is leaky C115. 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Drake 2-B, 2-C/2-NT, 4-A, 4-B, C-Line and TR-4/C Service Supplement CDs www.k4oah.com Paul Gerhardt wrote: This is a minor issue but is there a cure for excessive 'bouncing' of the S-Meter? It seems to work normally but with say an S9 signal it seems to 'bounce' excessivly. Maybe the AVC is not as Slow as it should be, it is working though, OR is it possible that the Meter itself has lost some of its 'damping' ability? ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
[Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
Lee, Garey, OK. Mystery solved. Curve tracers are wonderful forensic tools. Lee, when I first looked at the 2N3394 from your R-4B it's I-V curves looked fine except for a decided dropoff in low current beta. At first I didn't flag this as a serious issue. The beta of all transistors is a function of collector current, tending to peak right where the factory DC tests are run :-) The falloff rate at low collector current was greater for transistors built over 40 years ago vs a transistor made today. The 2N3394 in your radio still meets min spec of 55 (barely) at 2mA. However, Drake ran the collector current at 1/8 that value and used a base current biasing method (in common use at the time) that suffers from excessive dependency upon the beta value, not for voltage gain but for setting up the correct bias levels. Your particular 2N3394 has a beta of only 25 at 250uA which is why it set up too low. Once it set up too low the further declining beta below 250uA made things even worse, effectively negating the compensating extra current through the 2.2M base bias resistor (the collector voltage rises under the starved collector current condition and would normally help provide addtional base bias). When you placed a fresh 2N3393 in there (min beta of 90 at 2mA), the bias problem went away. Not only was its beta higher at 2mA, it probably fell off a lot less at 250uA also. So the only mystery left is why Q7 worked well enough to leave the factory but not at the present time. Low current beta is dependent upon surface states in the Silicon crystal in the region of the base structure. Early transistor manufacturing techniques left much to be desired in terms of surface state control and early plastic packaging (think leaching of ions) compounded the stituation. So I'm guessing the low current beta was marginal when it left the factory and slid down over time. Another posibility is a reverse application of BE voltage (even momentary) as that is known to degrade low current beta. Looking at the circuit the only way that's going to happen is an errant application of a test probe. So most likely it was slow degradation over time. Anyway, the data supports your 2N3393 fix. Given what I've learned I would recommned that concerned R-4B users make a simple DC measurement of the voltage across R141 and if excessively low (i.e. well below 20mV), then do exactly what you did: replace Q7 with a fresh 2N3393 and recheck bias levels. R-4B owners may want to do this because R141 is not there to manage bias, it is there for emitter degeneration, a form of negative feedback that reduces distortion under strong audio signals. If insufficient voltage is developed across R141 the distortion will be greater. Hope this explanation helps the list. I learned something here. Dennis AE6C ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
Dennis, Very good explanation...I understoof about 30% of it...but then I am a tech., not an engineer. Hi, Hi. Since my friend had loaned the R-4B out for a few years, he does not know when the problem started, or if it was gradual or all of a sudden. When we were working on it...Garey rightly so kept telling me the voltages are wrong on Q7...it proved to be correct. What made this tough is that Q7 was kind of working...so I was checking, replacing everything BUT Q7. When Q7 was correctly replaced the R-4B sprang to life. (Another lesson...don't change parts out at 1:00AM! Hi, Hi) One thing for everyone here to understand is: The audio was still wotking, just not wellsome may have just thought well, we have a weak tube or something and used it the way it was! The thing is at the 12:00 position of the AF gain...it was useable...just not right. Noe at 12:00 it will blow you away in volume...and when it was not correct there was some distortion appearing especially after 12:00 on the gain. Thanks again go out to Garey for hanging in there with me to get this fixed, and to you Dennis for letting us know what was actually wrong with Q7. So, to everyone in Drakeland, watch your P's Q7's 73, Lee, KC9CDT -Original Message- From: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com; Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com Cc: drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 2:52 pm Subject: R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394) Lee, Garey, OK. Mystery solved. Curve tracers are wonderful forensic tools. Lee, when I first looked at the 2N3394 from your R-4B it's I-V curves looked fine except for a decided dropoff in low current beta. At first I didn't flag this as a serious issue. The beta of all transistors is a function of collector current, tending to peak right where the factory DC tests are run :-) The falloff rate at low collector current was greater for transistors built over 40 years ago vs a transistor made today. The 2N3394 in your radio still meets min spec of 55 (barely) at 2mA. However, Drake ran the collector current at 1/8 that value and used a base current biasing method (in common use at the time) that suffers from excessive dependency upon the beta value, not for voltage gain but for setting up the correct bias levels. Your particular 2N3394 has a beta of only 25 at 250uA which is why it set up too low. Once it set up too low the further declining beta below 250uA made things even worse, effectively negating the compensating extra current through the 2.2M base bias resistor (the collector voltage rises under the starved collector current condition and would normally help provide addtional base bias). When you placed a fresh 2N3393 in there (min beta of 90 at 2mA), the bias problem went away. Not only was its beta higher at 2mA, it probably fell off a lot less at 250uA also. So the only mystery left is why Q7 worked well enough to leave the factory but not at the present time. Low current beta is dependent upon surface states in the Silicon crystal in the region of the base structure. Early transistor manufacturing techniques left much to be desired in terms of surface state control and early plastic packaging (think leaching of ions) compounded the stituation. So I'm guessing the low current beta was marginal when it left the factory and slid down over time. Another posibility is a reverse application of BE voltage (even momentary) as that is known to degrade low current beta. Looking at the circuit the only way that's going to happen is an errant application of a test probe. So most likely it was slow degradation over time. Anyway, the data supports your 2N3393 fix. Given what I've learned I would recommned that concerned R-4B users make a simple DC measurement of the voltage across R141 and if excessively low (i.e. well below 20mV), then do exactly what you did: replace Q7 with a fresh 2N3393 and recheck bias levels. R-4B owners may want to do this because R141 is not there to manage bias, it is there for emitter degeneration, a form of negative feedback that reduces distortion under strong audio signals. If insufficient voltage is developed across R141 the distortion will be greater. Hope this explanation helps the list. I learned something here. Dennis AE6C ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
Dennis - I think the saying is 'even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then, if you put him under an oak tree! :-) That's why I suggested Beta, a low B-E current just made it worse. I've never seen a small signal BJT fail that way, but your explanation makes sense. I have seen some of the early RF Power transistors that were actually multiple transistors all collected in parallel and one or more would blow open! I believe R141 is ALSO a form of temperature compensation, as the transistor 'warms' up, the B-E drop lowers, increasing the bias current. The drop across the E resistor also increases, decreasing the bias current. Much more stable DC operating point. It DOES also add some negative feedback for the signal, reducing distortion. It also stabilizes the circuit with different transistors as without it the stage gain is limited ONLY by device Beta and internal resistance. With the E resistor, the output is the ratio of Er to Cr, swamping device variations, for a gain of about 580. Very interesting exercise. Thanks very much for your help and expertise! 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, Garey, OK. Mystery solved. Curve tracers are wonderful forensic tools. Lee, when I first looked at the 2N3394 from your R-4B it's I-V curves looked fine except for a decided dropoff in low current beta. At first I didn't flag this as a serious issue. The beta of all transistors is a function of collector current, tending to peak right where the factory DC tests are run :-) The falloff rate at low collector current was greater for transistors built over 40 years ago vs a transistor made today. The 2N3394 in your radio still meets min spec of 55 (barely) at 2mA. However, Drake ran the collector current at 1/8 that value and used a base current biasing method (in common use at the time) that suffers from excessive dependency upon the beta value, not for voltage gain but for setting up the correct bias levels. Your particular 2N3394 has a beta of only 25 at 250uA which is why it set up too low. Once it set up too low the further declining beta below 250uA made things even worse, effectively negating the compensating extra current through the 2.2M base bias resistor (the collector voltage rises under the starved collector current condition and would normally help provide addtional base bias). When you placed a fresh 2N3393 in there (min beta of 90 at 2mA), the bias problem went away. Not only was its beta higher at 2mA, it probably fell off a lot less at 250uA also. So the only mystery left is why Q7 worked well enough to leave the factory but not at the present time. Low current beta is dependent upon surface states in the Silicon crystal in the region of the base structure. Early transistor manufacturing techniques left much to be desired in terms of surface state control and early plastic packaging (think leaching of ions) compounded the stituation. So I'm guessing the low current beta was marginal when it left the factory and slid down over time. Another posibility is a reverse application of BE voltage (even momentary) as that is known to degrade low current beta. Looking at the circuit the only way that's going to happen is an errant application of a test probe. So most likely it was slow degradation over time. Anyway, the data supports your 2N3393 fix. Given what I've learned I would recommned that concerned R-4B users make a simple DC measurement of the voltage across R141 and if excessively low (i.e. well below 20mV), then do exactly what you did: replace Q7 with a fresh 2N3393 and recheck bias levels. R-4B owners may want to do this because R141 is not there to manage bias, it is there for emitter degeneration, a form of negative feedback that reduces distortion under strong audio signals. If insufficient voltage is developed across R141 the distortion will be greater. Hope this explanation helps the list. I learned something here. Dennis AE6C ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters
I searched for a long time for led replacements for the #53 bulbs that would give the Drake blue color and not look purple or intense blue. Here's what I came up with and you can't tell it doesn't have the #53 bulbs in it except I don't have to remove the DR7 board every other month to replace the bulb. the bulbs I use are from SuperBrightLEDs.com part no. Warm White BA9s-WWHP6. I then added a 220 ohm 1/2 watt resistor in series with the hot lead on the bulb to dim it a little. The bulbs are a BA9 base so they go right in. If the stock blue gels are ok then the color is the same as with the #53 bulbs. If the gel is faded I use #854 Roscolene Steel Blue. If you hold this and the stock Drake blue gel up to light you can't tell any difference. Now the TR7 looks like a Drake with the proper color of blue and the LEDs should last in excess of 100,000 hours instead of 1000 hours for the #53 bulb. The LEDs also draw a lot less current and don't heat up the PTO. The red numbers on the s-meter show up fine. 73, Joe KC9LAD At 10:10 AM 4/17/2011, you wrote: Jim, I have both blue and red LEDs on my TR7 s-meter. Kind of works, but leaves a red blush on the meter that makes the blue look strange. White LEDs and blue filter didn't do so good for me either. The B-line has less issue with only the pointer being red. I would be interested in hearing others' experiences in trying to recover the TR7 s-meter red with LED bulb replacements. 73, Ron WD8SBB --- On Sat, 4/16/11, Jim Shorney jshor...@inebraska.com wrote: From: Jim Shorney jshor...@inebraska.com Subject: Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters To: drakel...@.zerobeat.net drakelist@zerobeat.net Date: Saturday, April 16, 2011, 12:04 PM On Sat, 16 Apr 2011 11:14:53 -0400, Mike Williams wrote: I changed my 4C and 7 line to these LED kits and they look great, generate less heat and consume much less power. I purchased the kits on line and they were very reasonable, try a search and you will find the supplier Or, you can build your own: http://radiojim.exofire.net/pages/blue.htmlhttp://radiojim.exofire.net/pages/blue.html There is a list of kit suppliers at the bottom of the page as well. In retrospect, I may try retrofitting a small red LED to my creation to bring out the red highlights in the S-Meter. The monochromtic blue LEDs obliterate the red color completely. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.orghttp://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.comwww.avg.com Version: 10.0.1209 / Virus Database: 1500/3579 - Release Date: 04/17/11 ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
One more thing to addthe 2N3393 worked super (batter than the 2N3394??)...in fact, at a AF gain setting of 8-9 o'clock...the audio is very nice at at a good listening levelat 10:00 with the RF gain down on a noisey band the R-4b really hears well. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com To: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com Cc: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 3:25 pm Subject: Re: R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394) Dennis - I think the saying is 'even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then, if you put him under an oak tree! :-) That's why I suggested Beta, a low B-E current just made it worse. I've never seen a small signal BJT fail that way, but your explanation makes sense. I have seen some of the early RF Power transistors that were actually multiple transistors all collected in parallel and one or more would blow open! I believe R141 is ALSO a form of temperature compensation, as the transistor 'warms' up, the B-E drop lowers, increasing the bias current. The drop across the E resistor also increases, decreasing the bias current. Much more stable DC operating point. It DOES also add some negative feedback for the signal, reducing distortion. It also stabilizes the circuit with different transistors as without it the stage gain is limited ONLY by device Beta and internal resistance. With the E resistor, the output is the ratio of Er to Cr, swamping device variations, for a gain of about 580. Very interesting exercise. Thanks very much for your help and expertise! 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, Garey, OK. Mystery solved. Curve tracers are wonderful forensic tools. Lee, when I first looked at the 2N3394 from your R-4B it's I-V curves looked fine except for a decided dropoff in low current beta. At first I didn't flag this as a serious issue. The beta of all transistors is a function of collector current, tending to peak right where the factory DC tests are run :-) The falloff rate at low collector current was greater for transistors built over 40 years ago vs a transistor made today. The 2N3394 in your radio still meets min spec of 55 (barely) at 2mA. However, Drake ran the collector current at 1/8 that value and used a base current biasing method (in common use at the time) that suffers from excessive dependency upon the beta value, not for voltage gain but for setting up the correct bias levels. Your particular 2N3394 has a beta of only 25 at 250uA which is why it set up too low. Once it set up too low the further declining beta below 250uA made things even worse, effectively negating the compensating extra current through the 2.2M base bias resistor (the collector voltage rises under the starved collector current condition and would normally help provide addtional base bias). When you placed a fresh 2N3393 in there (min beta of 90 at 2mA), the bias problem went away. Not only was its beta higher at 2mA, it probably fell off a lot less at 250uA also. So the only mystery left is why Q7 worked well enough to leave the factory but not at the present time. Low current beta is dependent upon surface states in the Silicon crystal in the region of the base structure. Early transistor manufacturing techniques left much to be desired in terms of surface state control and early plastic packaging (think leaching of ions) compounded the stituation. So I'm guessing the low current beta was marginal when it left the factory and slid down over time. Another posibility is a reverse application of BE voltage (even momentary) as that is known to degrade low current beta. Looking at the circuit the only way that's going to happen is an errant application of a test probe. So most likely it was slow degradation over time. Anyway, the data supports your 2N3393 fix. Given what I've learned I would recommned that concerned R-4B users make a simple DC measurement of the voltage across R141 and if excessively low (i.e. well below 20mV), then do exactly what you did: replace Q7 with a fresh 2N3393 and recheck bias levels. R-4B owners may want to do this because R141 is not there to manage bias, it is there for emitter degeneration, a form of negative feedback that reduces distortion under strong audio signals. If insufficient voltage is developed across R141 the distortion will be greater. Hope this explanation helps the list. I learned something here. Dennis AE6C ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 15:13:23 -0400 (EDT), kc9...@aol.com wrote: Very good explanation...I understoof about 30% of it...but then I am a tech., not an engineer. Hi, Hi. What made this tough is that Q7 was kind of working...so I was checking, replacing everything BUT Q7. My experience as a tech in situations like this has taught me to suspect capacitors first, transistors next. I've seen transistors fail in some strange ways over the years. :) I've recently learned that disc ceramic caps are not ideal for audio coupling. You guys have got me thinking about distortion and such. I'm thinking about putting the TR-7 on the bench and trying out that nifty surplus distortion analyzer that's languising out in the garage. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 15:24:53 -0400, Joe Pyles wrote: the bulbs I use are from SuperBrightLEDs.com part no. Warm White BA9s-WWHP6. Interesting. How does the S-Meter look? Does the red numbering show up? 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
I believe it. However, I think it had less to do with the transistor being a 2N3393 and pretty much all due to just having a beta high enough to allow the transistor stage to bias correctly. Another transistor type with good beta would have probably worked as well. You kept it in the family by choosing the 2N3393, so I prefer the route you took. Dennis AE6C On Sun, Apr 17, 2011 at 12:33 PM, kc9...@aol.com wrote: One more thing to addthe 2N3393 worked super (batter than the 2N3394??)...in fact, at a AF gain setting of 8-9 o'clock...the audio is very nice at at a good listening levelat 10:00 with the RF gain down on a noisey band the R-4b really hears well. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com To: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com Cc: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 3:25 pm Subject: Re: R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394) Dennis - I think the saying is 'even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then, if you put him under an oak tree! :-) That's why I suggested Beta, a low B-E current just made it worse. I've never seen a small signal BJT fail that way, but your explanation makes sense. I have seen some of the early RF Power transistors that were actually multiple transistors all collected in parallel and one or more would blow open! I believe R141 is ALSO a form of temperature compensation, as the transistor 'warms' up, the B-E drop lowers, increasing the bias current. The drop across the E resistor also increases, decreasing the bias current. Much more stable DC operating point. It DOES also add some negative feedback for the signal, reducing distortion. It also stabilizes the circuit with different transistors as without it the stage gain is limited ONLY by device Beta and internal resistance. With the E resistor, the output is the ratio of Er to Cr, swamping device variations, for a gain of about 580. Very interesting exercise. Thanks very much for your help and expertise! 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, Garey, OK. Mystery solved. Curve tracers are wonderful forensic tools. Lee, when I first looked at the 2N3394 from your R-4B it's I-V curves looked fine except for a decided dropoff in low current beta. At first I didn't flag this as a serious issue. The beta of all transistors is a function of collector current, tending to peak right where the factory DC tests are run :-) The falloff rate at low collector current was greater for transistors built over 40 years ago vs a transistor made today. The 2N3394 in your radio still meets min spec of 55 (barely) at 2mA. However, Drake ran the collector current at 1/8 that value and used a base current biasing method (in common use at the time) that suffers from excessive dependency upon the beta value, not for voltage gain but for setting up the correct bias levels. Your particular 2N3394 has a beta of only 25 at 250uA which is why it set up too low. Once it set up too low the further declining beta below 250uA made things even worse, effectively negating the compensating extra current through the 2.2M base bias resistor (the collector voltage rises under the starved collector current condition and would normally help provide addtional base bias). When you placed a fresh 2N3393 in there (min beta of 90 at 2mA), the bias problem went away. Not only was its beta higher at 2mA, it probably fell off a lot less at 250uA also. So the only mystery left is why Q7 worked well enough to leave the factory but not at the present time. Low current beta is dependent upon surface states in the Silicon crystal in the region of the base structure. Early transistor manufacturing techniques left much to be desired in terms of surface state control and early plastic packaging (think leaching of ions) compounded the stituation. So I'm guessing the low current beta was marginal when it left the factory and slid down over time. Another posibility is a reverse application of BE voltage (even momentary) as that is known to degrade low current beta. Looking at the circuit the only way that's going to happen is an errant application of a test probe. So most likely it was slow degradation over time. Anyway, the data supports your 2N3393 fix. Given what I've learned I would recommned that concerned R-4B users make a simple DC measurement of the voltage across R141 and if excessively low (i.e. well below 20mV), then do exactly what you did: replace Q7 with a fresh 2N3393 and recheck bias levels. R-4B owners may want to do this because R141 is not there to manage bias, it is there for emitter degeneration, a form of negative feedback that reduces distortion under strong audio signals. If insufficient voltage is developed across R141 the distortion will be greater. Hope this explanation helps the list. I learned
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
That would be an interesting study, going stage by stage through the audio channel of a 4 or 7 series radio. I'll bet that when the R-4B was designed, the Drake lab didn't have such a piece of equipment and probably went by ear or visuals on a scope. Maybe someone familar with what Drake had to work with back then could shed some light on this. Dennis AE6C On Sun, Apr 17, 2011 at 12:59 PM, Jim Shorney jshor...@inebraska.comwrote: On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 15:13:23 -0400 (EDT), kc9...@aol.com wrote: Very good explanation...I understoof about 30% of it...but then I am a tech., not an engineer. Hi, Hi. What made this tough is that Q7 was kind of working...so I was checking, replacing everything BUT Q7. My experience as a tech in situations like this has taught me to suspect capacitors first, transistors next. I've seen transistors fail in some strange ways over the years. :) I've recently learned that disc ceramic caps are not ideal for audio coupling. You guys have got me thinking about distortion and such. I'm thinking about putting the TR-7 on the bench and trying out that nifty surplus distortion analyzer that's languising out in the garage. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
Dennis, Late that night when Garey I decided to swap the transistor, I gave a list of the few I had and he said the 2N3393 would be fine...and he was right on. Probably any General purpose NPN switching/amp transistor would work OK...I don't think it's all that critical of a circuit. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com To: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com Cc: k4oah k4...@mindspring.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 4:04 pm Subject: Re: R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394) I believe it. However, I think it had less to do with the transistor being a 2N3393 and pretty much all due to just having a beta high enough to allow the transistor stage to bias correctly. Another transistor type with good beta would have probably worked as well. You kept it in the family by choosing the 2N3393, so I prefer the route you took. Dennis AE6C On Sun, Apr 17, 2011 at 12:33 PM, kc9...@aol.com wrote: One more thing to addthe 2N3393 worked super (batter than the 2N3394??)...in fact, at a AF gain setting of 8-9 o'clock...the audio is very nice at at a good listening levelat 10:00 with the RF gain down on a noisey band the R-4b really hears well. 73, Lee -Original Message- From: Garey Barrell k4...@mindspring.com To: Dennis Monticelli dennis.montice...@gmail.com Cc: kc9cdt kc9...@aol.com; drakelist drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sun, Apr 17, 2011 3:25 pm Subject: Re: R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394) Dennis - I think the saying is 'even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then, if you put him under an oak tree! :-) That's why I suggested Beta, a low B-E current just made it worse. I've never seen a small signal BJT fail that way, but your explanation makes sense. I have seen some of the early RF Power transistors that were actually multiple transistors all collected in parallel and one or more would blow open! I believe R141 is ALSO a form of temperature compensation, as the transistor 'warms' up, the B-E drop lowers, increasing the bias current. The drop across the E resistor also increases, decreasing the bias current. Much more stable DC operating point. It DOES also add some negative feedback for the signal, reducing distortion. It also stabilizes the circuit with different transistors as without it the stage gain is limited ONLY by device Beta and internal resistance. With the E resistor, the output is the ratio of Er to Cr, swamping device variations, for a gain of about 580. Very interesting exercise. Thanks very much for your help and expertise! 73, Garey - K4OAH Glen Allen, VA Dennis Monticelli wrote: Lee, Garey, OK. Mystery solved. Curve tracers are wonderful forensic tools. Lee, when I first looked at the 2N3394 from your R-4B it's I-V curves looked fine except for a decided dropoff in low current beta. At first I didn't flag this as a serious issue. The beta of all transistors is a function of collector current, tending to peak right where the factory DC tests are run :-) The falloff rate at low collector current was greater for transistors built over 40 years ago vs a transistor made today. The 2N3394 in your radio still meets min spec of 55 (barely) at 2mA. However, Drake ran the collector current at 1/8 that value and used a base current biasing method (in common use at the time) that suffers from excessive dependency upon the beta value, not for voltage gain but for setting up the correct bias levels. Your particular 2N3394 has a beta of only 25 at 250uA which is why it set up too low. Once it set up too low the further declining beta below 250uA made things even worse, effectively negating the compensating extra current through the 2.2M base bias resistor (the collector voltage rises under the starved collector current condition and would normally help provide addtional base bias). When you placed a fresh 2N3393 in there (min beta of 90 at 2mA), the bias problem went away. Not only was its beta higher at 2mA, it probably fell off a lot less at 250uA also. So the only mystery left is why Q7 worked well enough to leave the factory but not at the present time. Low current beta is dependent upon surface states in the Silicon crystal in the region of the base structure. Early transistor manufacturing techniques left much to be desired in terms of surface state control and early plastic packaging (think leaching of ions) compounded the stituation. So I'm guessing the low current beta was marginal when it left the factory and slid down over time. Another posibility is a reverse application of BE voltage (even momentary) as that is known to degrade low current beta. Looking at the circuit the only way that's going to happen is an errant application of a test probe. So most likely it was slow degradation over time. Anyway, the data supports your 2N3393 fix. Given what I've learned I would recommned that concerned R-4B users make a
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 13:07:35 -0700, Dennis Monticelli wrote: That would be an interesting study, going stage by stage through the audio channel of a 4 or 7 series radio. I'll bet that when the R-4B was designed, the Drake lab didn't have such a piece of equipment and probably went by ear or visuals on a scope. I've got a couple of HP and a Leader. The Leader gets the nod at the moment because it has a much smaller footprint. I serously need to declutter my workbench... 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
- Original Message - From: Jim Shorney jshor...@inebraska.com To: drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sunday, April 17, 2011 12:59 PM Subject: Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394) On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 15:13:23 -0400 (EDT), kc9...@aol.com wrote: Very good explanation...I understoof about 30% of it...but then I am a tech., not an engineer. Hi, Hi. What made this tough is that Q7 was kind of working...so I was checking, replacing everything BUT Q7. My experience as a tech in situations like this has taught me to suspect capacitors first, transistors next. I've seen transistors fail in some strange ways over the years. :) I've recently learned that disc ceramic caps are not ideal for audio coupling. You guys have got me thinking about distortion and such. I'm thinking about putting the TR-7 on the bench and trying out that nifty surplus distortion analyzer that's languising out in the garage. 73 -Jim The use of ceramic caps in audio circuits is somewhat controversial. Ceramics of some types, mainly high-K types, do tend to have a variation of capacitance with voltage and some audio folks think this contributes some distortion. However, in most coupling circuits there is a steady DC voltage on the cap that exceeds the AC voltage. Also, I have never seen any rigorous research on this showing that a real difference exists. High-K ceramics do have high temperature coeficient of capacitance but low-K ones can have zero temperature variation (NPO types). There can also be a small variation in effective capacitance due to interfacial polarization (don't ask) but mica caps have the same problem. This is of concern only were a cap is used for precision measurement at low frequencies. Paper and plastic film caps have virtually none of this effect. I doubt if it has any significance for normal audio use. Ceramic caps have the virtues of small sizes, availability in high voltages, and great reliability and long life. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL dickb...@ix.netcom.com ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 14:23:02 -0700, Richard Knoppow wrote: The use of ceramic caps in audio circuits is somewhat controversial. Thanks for the info, Richard. There's been a good discussion of this on the R-390 list recently. I may have to go back and re-read some of it. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters
Yes the red numbers show up fine. The color is very close to the way it looks with #53 bulbs. 73, Joe KC9LAD At 04:01 PM 4/17/2011, you wrote: On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 15:24:53 -0400, Joe Pyles wrote: the bulbs I use are from SuperBrightLEDs.com part no. Warm White BA9s-WWHP6. Interesting. How does the S-Meter look? Does the red numbering show up? 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist - No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 10.0.1209 / Virus Database: 1500/3580 - Release Date: 04/17/11 ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 18:23:09 -0400, Joe Pyles wrote: Yes the red numbers show up fine. The color is very close to the way it looks with #53 bulbs. I may have to investigate those when finances loosen back up a little. OK Curt, you win. :) 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 15:27:13 -0700, Dennis Monticelli wrote: As I understand it, the only true concern one should have about the ceramics is the piezo effect of the high K material. This makes the circuit microphonic so unwanted acoustic feedback from the PA can take place. I agree that voltage coeficient is not a significant effect unless you're trying to build high accuracy stuff. In the world of integrated circuits of which I'm familiar, the votlage coefficient only rears its ugly head beyond the 12b level. At 16b it's a real concern, but we're talking very high linearity here. Here's the stuff I just sent Richard off-list: FWIW, here's the most relevant portion of the R-390 discussion: --- Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2011 00:05:53 -0400 From: 2002tii Subject: Re: [R-390] Orange Drop vs ceramic disc There have been many tests, back to at least the '40s (long before small surfacemountceramics were a gleam in anyone's eye), documenting this behavior of ceramic caps. Bob Pease published a chart in EDN in the early '80s comparing the dielectric absorption-related distortion of various types of capacitors that showed measured distortion of 1% or more at low audio frequencies for ceramics (though NP0 caps were much better). (Note that this is a different mechanism than the voltage coefficient of capacitance, and that both mechanisms cause distortion independently.) We comprehensively tested all kinds of capacitors in audio coupling circuits in the '80s, and I assure you that the distortion from ceramic caps is clearly audible. Yes, we used a high-resolution audio system, not a communications radio -- but different types of distortion are heard more or less independently (that is, one type -- for example, even-order harmonic distortion, which dominates tube communications radio distortion -- does not mask another type -- for example, high-order intermodulation distortion or digital quantization errors, even when it is present at much higher levels), so the distortion due to ceramic coupling caps may very well be audible even in a circuit with 10% even-order harmonic distortion. We also used signal cancellation techniques to listen to the distortion products alone, and the distortion products of ceramic caps are extremely uglysounding (high-order, non harmonically-related -- easy to spot at very low levels). Since it is no effort whatsoever to avoid ceramic caps in coupling applications, there is simply no reason to use ceramics in those applications (indeed, it is simply good engineering practice to avoid possible ill effects when there is little or no cost to do so). --- Date: Thu, 31 Mar 2011 10:29:55 -0400 From: Shoppa, Tim Subject: Re: [R-390] Orange Drop vs ceramic disc Please keep in mind that when it comes to ceramic caps, the dielectric materials available vary widely in their characteristics. C0G or NP0 ceramic caps could well be golden in audio applications but don't have enough uF per package to be used in most situations. X7R ceramic caps are probably good enough for not-hi-fi applications. Indeed lots of low-end consumer tube stuff from the 60's used ceramic audio coupling caps. Y5V caps literally sound like crap in audio coupling circuits. The latest SMD ceramic caps and their MLCC leaded cousins, almost certainly outperform any 50 year old NOS ceramics we have lying about, every which way from Sunday. I look at the high-end microwave SMT ceramic caps (actually the highest end ones are glass) and they beat the pants off of any leaded component. --- Also, I found the Bob Pease article on the web: http://www.national.com/rap/Application/0,1570,28,00.html Then, there's this, which doesn't seem to be downloading very well at the moment: http://www.designers-guide.org/Modeling/da.pdf It all could very well be moot for communications radios, but OTOH, distortion does tend to add up. -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
OHHH Yeah...:) Curt Jim Shorney wrote: On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 14:23:02 -0700, Richard Knoppow wrote: The use of ceramic caps in audio circuits is somewhat controversial. Thanks for the info, Richard. There's been a good discussion of this on the R-390 list recently. I may have to go back and re-read some of it. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] Drakelist Digest,RE: Blue Foil Filters
With the stuff available today, I think we all win Jim!! I ran into the red print v. red light on the boat. We all used red night lighting below deck at night to protect the night vision. There was a duplicate set of wiring throughout the boat so the white lights could be off at the breaker panel and no accidents by turning on the wrong lights. I had red gooseneck lights over the chart table but the red light made all the red lines and lettering on the charts disapear! Not good. In alot of planes now the night lighing is a sort of blue color that preserves night vision and still allows the cart colors to be seen. I used a blue drake-likie filter on the white light at night to solve the problem. Curt Jim Shorney wrote: On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 18:23:09 -0400, Joe Pyles wrote: Yes the red numbers show up fine. The color is very close to the way it looks with #53 bulbs. I may have to investigate those when finances loosen back up a little. OK Curt, you win. :) 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
HP had some mighty fine audio distortion analyzers and reference sine equipment in the 60's--we used it on the McIntosh stuff a lot. 600 series if I recall...same size as my RF gen. 19 rack mount..50 Lbs Curt Jim Shorney wrote: On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 13:07:35 -0700, Dennis Monticelli wrote: That would be an interesting study, going stage by stage through the audio channel of a 4 or 7 series radio. I'll bet that when the R-4B was designed, the Drake lab didn't have such a piece of equipment and probably went by ear or visuals on a scope. I've got a couple of HP and a Leader. The Leader gets the nod at the moment because it has a much smaller footprint. I serously need to declutter my workbench... 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 20:13:18 -0400, Curt Nixon wrote: HP had some mighty fine audio distortion analyzers and reference sine equipment in the 60's--we used it on the McIntosh stuff a lot. 600 series if I recall...same size as my RF gen. 19 rack mount..50 Lbs As I recall, mine are 300-series. More like 70s or 80s, I would guess. Still not light or small. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
- Original Message - From: Curt Nixon cptc...@flash.net To: Jim Shorney jshor...@inebraska.com Cc: drakelist@zerobeat.net Sent: Sunday, April 17, 2011 5:13 PM Subject: Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394) HP had some mighty fine audio distortion analyzers and reference sine equipment in the 60's--we used it on the McIntosh stuff a lot. 600 series if I recall...same size as my RF gen. 19 rack mount..50 Lbs Curt General Radio also made a good low distortion audio genrator and harmonic distortion meter. Probably most of them were sold for broadcast station use in doing proof of performance testing but they were useful for production testing also. The generator had residual distortion on the order of 0.1%, high by modern standards but certainly low enough for routine testing of single ended tube amplifiers. I think the residual of the meter was lower. This is mid-1950's stuff. By the mid 1960s -hp- had much better generators and analysers available. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL dickb...@ix.netcom.com ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist
Re: [Drakelist] R-4B audio problem traced to low beta Q7 (2N3394)
On Sun, 17 Apr 2011 19:33:16 -0700, Richard Knoppow wrote: General Radio also made a good low distortion audio genrator and harmonic distortion meter. GR is nice stuff. I spotted a GR decade resistor box in the pile that I forgot I had when I was looking for the Leader distortion analyzer. It came in the house with me too. I picked up one of those retro looking GR sound level meters at an estate sale a couple of years ago, dirt cheap. I had seen them before, so I knew immediately what it was. You probably know it, the late 50s/early 60s hand-held model that used low voltage pencil tubes. All it needs are some brass accents to be steampunk. Other than some battery corrosion in the bottom, it is as pristine inside as something of that age can be. I rigged some power to it and it works FB, and I suspect it is still fairly close in calibration. It's just too cool not to keep and show off proudly. 73 -Jim -- Ham Radio NU0C Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.S.A. TR7/RV7/R7A/L7, TR6/RV6, T4XC/R4C/L4B, NCL2000, SB104A, R390A, GT550A/RV550A, HyGain 3750, IBM PS/2 - all vintage, all the time! Give a man a URL, and he will learn for an hour; teach him to Google, and he will learn for a lifetime. HyGain 3750 User's Group - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HyGain_3750/ http://incolor.inetnebr.com/jshorney http://www.nebraskaghosts.org ___ Drakelist mailing list Drakelist@zerobeat.net http://mailman.zerobeat.net/mailman/listinfo/drakelist