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#1
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Hi -- I recently completed some repair work on a National NC-57. I
did the typical replacement of electrolytics, out of tolerance resistors, etc. It was functioning reasonably well beforehand but was in need of some TLC. Following my repair work, I turned the unit on and am only receiving a hum with no RX. I conducted some resistance measurements at all tube sockets and every measurement was nominal (according to my NC-57 manual) except for pin 6 of tube 7 (6V6GT). The manual indicates a resistance reading of 380K ohms and I'm receiving around 50K ohms (same as pin 3 and pin 4). To be honest, I can't see how pin 6 should be 380K ohms. The output transformer primary shunt resistor is 22K ohms and everything is wired correctly at the tube socket. I double checked my work and carefully reviewed the schematics -- everything looks good. I'm really stumped here... Any help would be greatly appreciated! Chris, N4JOY |
#2
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#3
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N4JOY wrote:
Hi -- I recently completed some repair work on a National NC-57. I did the typical replacement of electrolytics, out of tolerance resistors, etc. It was functioning reasonably well beforehand but was in need of some TLC. Following my repair work, I turned the unit on and am only receiving a hum with no RX. I conducted some resistance measurements at all tube sockets and every measurement was nominal (according to my NC-57 manual) except for pin 6 of tube 7 (6V6GT). The manual indicates a resistance reading of 380K ohms and I'm receiving around 50K ohms (same as pin 3 and pin 4). To be honest, I can't see how pin 6 should be 380K ohms. The output transformer primary shunt resistor is 22K ohms and everything is wired correctly at the tube socket. I double checked my work and carefully reviewed the schematics -- everything looks good. I'm really stumped here... Remove the tube. Does the resistance change? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
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On Jan 28, 2:26*pm, Don Bowey wrote:
On 1/28/08 9:37 AM, in article , "N4JOY" wrote: Hi -- I recently completed some repair work on a National NC-57. *I did the typical replacement of electrolytics, out of tolerance resistors, etc. *It was functioning reasonably well beforehand but was in need of some TLC. *Following my repair work, I turned the unit on and am only receiving a hum with no RX. *I conducted some resistance measurements at all tube sockets and every measurement was nominal (according to my NC-57 manual) except for pin 6 of tube 7 (6V6GT). The manual indicates a resistance reading of 380K ohms and I'm receiving around 50K ohms (same as pin 3 and pin 4). *To be honest, I can't see how pin 6 should be 380K ohms. *The output transformer primary shunt resistor is 22K ohms and everything is wired correctly at the tube socket. *I double checked my work and carefully reviewed the schematics -- everything looks good. *I'm really stumped here... Any help would be greatly appreciated! Chris, N4JOY There is either a wiring error or a defective component. *Pin 6 of the tube socket is not used by the tube, so it is obviously used as a tie-point. Trace in both directions from pin 6 and you should find the problem. Hmmmmm... Are you certain that each tube is in it's correct socket?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thank you for your reply. I just double checked each tube socket and all tubes are installed correctly. You are right about pin 6 of 6V6GT (tube 7) being used as a tie point. One end of a .1uf cap and 22K resistor are soldered to pin 6 (the other end of the .1uf cap goes to the tone switch). Pin 6 is also jumpered to pin 3, which then connects to the speaker (output) transformer. Pin 4 has the other end of the 22K resistor soldered and another lead to the speaker transformer. There are also two wires leaving pin 4 of 6V6GT: one goes to the reception switch and the other to the voltage regulator (pin 4). I left the wiring alone during my repairs so either the value of 380K ohms in the NC-57 chart is a typo (unlikely) or perhaps the 6V6GT is defective? I did try to inject a signal via the antenna connectors with my RF signal generator... still no luck. I just have a slight hum and no RX. Chris, N4JOY |
#5
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On Jan 28, 3:03*pm, (Scott Dorsey) wrote:
N4JOY wrote: Hi -- I recently completed some repair work on a National NC-57. *I did the typical replacement of electrolytics, out of tolerance resistors, etc. *It was functioning reasonably well beforehand but was in need of some TLC. *Following my repair work, I turned the unit on and am only receiving a hum with no RX. *I conducted some resistance measurements at all tube sockets and every measurement was nominal (according to my NC-57 manual) except for pin 6 of tube 7 (6V6GT). The manual indicates a resistance reading of 380K ohms and I'm receiving around 50K ohms (same as pin 3 and pin 4). *To be honest, I can't see how pin 6 should be 380K ohms. *The output transformer primary shunt resistor is 22K ohms and everything is wired correctly at the tube socket. *I double checked my work and carefully reviewed the schematics -- everything looks good. *I'm really stumped here... Remove the tube. *Does the resistance change? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. *C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." Hi -- the resistance of pin 6 to ground at 6V6 is 67.9K ohms. It remains unchanged when the tube is removed. Thanks, Chris, N4JOY |
#6
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![]() "N4JOY" wrote in message ... On Jan 28, 2:26 pm, Don Bowey wrote: On 1/28/08 9:37 AM, in article , "N4JOY" wrote: Hi -- I recently completed some repair work on a National NC-57. I did the typical replacement of electrolytics, out of tolerance resistors, etc. It was functioning reasonably well beforehand but was in need of some TLC. Following my repair work, I turned the unit on and am only receiving a hum with no RX. I conducted some resistance measurements at all tube sockets and every measurement was nominal (according to my NC-57 manual) except for pin 6 of tube 7 (6V6GT). The manual indicates a resistance reading of 380K ohms and I'm receiving around 50K ohms (same as pin 3 and pin 4). To be honest, I can't see how pin 6 should be 380K ohms. The output transformer primary shunt resistor is 22K ohms and everything is wired correctly at the tube socket. I double checked my work and carefully reviewed the schematics -- everything looks good. I'm really stumped here... Any help would be greatly appreciated! Chris, N4JOY There is either a wiring error or a defective component. Pin 6 of the tube socket is not used by the tube, so it is obviously used as a tie-point. Trace in both directions from pin 6 and you should find the problem. Hmmmmm... Are you certain that each tube is in it's correct socket?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thank you for your reply. I just double checked each tube socket and all tubes are installed correctly. You are right about pin 6 of 6V6GT (tube 7) being used as a tie point. One end of a .1uf cap and 22K resistor are soldered to pin 6 (the other end of the .1uf cap goes to the tone switch). Pin 6 is also jumpered to pin 3, which then connects to the speaker (output) transformer. Pin 4 has the other end of the 22K resistor soldered and another lead to the speaker transformer. There are also two wires leaving pin 4 of 6V6GT: one goes to the reception switch and the other to the voltage regulator (pin 4). I left the wiring alone during my repairs so either the value of 380K ohms in the NC-57 chart is a typo (unlikely) or perhaps the 6V6GT is defective? I did try to inject a signal via the antenna connectors with my RF signal generator... still no luck. I just have a slight hum and no RX. Chris, N4JOY |
#7
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![]() "N4JOY" wrote in message ... On Jan 28, 2:26 pm, Don Bowey wrote: On 1/28/08 9:37 AM, in article , "N4JOY" wrote: Hi -- I recently completed some repair work on a National NC-57. I did the typical replacement of electrolytics, out of tolerance resistors, etc. It was functioning reasonably well beforehand but was in need of some TLC. Following my repair work, I turned the unit on and am only receiving a hum with no RX. I conducted some resistance measurements at all tube sockets and every measurement was nominal (according to my NC-57 manual) except for pin 6 of tube 7 (6V6GT). The manual indicates a resistance reading of 380K ohms and I'm receiving around 50K ohms (same as pin 3 and pin 4). To be honest, I can't see how pin 6 should be 380K ohms. The output transformer primary shunt resistor is 22K ohms and everything is wired correctly at the tube socket. I double checked my work and carefully reviewed the schematics -- everything looks good. I'm really stumped here... Any help would be greatly appreciated! Chris, N4JOY There is either a wiring error or a defective component. Pin 6 of the tube socket is not used by the tube, so it is obviously used as a tie-point. Trace in both directions from pin 6 and you should find the problem. Hmmmmm... Are you certain that each tube is in it's correct socket?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thank you for your reply. I just double checked each tube socket and all tubes are installed correctly. You are right about pin 6 of 6V6GT (tube 7) being used as a tie point. One end of a .1uf cap and 22K resistor are soldered to pin 6 (the other end of the .1uf cap goes to the tone switch). Pin 6 is also jumpered to pin 3, which then connects to the speaker (output) transformer. Pin 4 has the other end of the 22K resistor soldered and another lead to the speaker transformer. There are also two wires leaving pin 4 of 6V6GT: one goes to the reception switch and the other to the voltage regulator (pin 4). I left the wiring alone during my repairs so either the value of 380K ohms in the NC-57 chart is a typo (unlikely) or perhaps the 6V6GT is defective? I did try to inject a signal via the antenna connectors with my RF signal generator... still no luck. I just have a slight hum and no RX. Chris, N4JOY The junction of the 0.1uf cap and 22K ohm resistor is at the plate of the tube. I hate to be obvious but are you counting the pins in the right direction? The 22K resistor goes between plate and screen grid of the 6V6. See if your hum changes with the volume control. The control is on the grid of the first audio tube and from that plate to the grid of the 6V6. If there is no change in hum level the problem is probably after the first audio, or nothing is getting to the grid. If the hum does change the problem is probably in the detector circuit somewhere. If you can try signal tracing the audio path. My guess is that your eye keeps missing some miswired connection. That happens all the time. Perhaps you can get someone else to go over the stuff you replaced. Sometimes another person will spot a moved wire or short right away when you have struggled with it for hours. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA |
#8
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On Jan 28, 2:21 pm, "Richard Knoppow" wrote:
"N4JOY" wrote in message ... On Jan 28, 2:26 pm, Don Bowey wrote: On 1/28/08 9:37 AM, in article , "N4JOY" wrote: Hi -- I recently completed some repair work on a National NC-57. I did the typical replacement of electrolytics, out of tolerance resistors, etc. It was functioning reasonably well beforehand but was in need of some TLC. Following my repair work, I turned the unit on and am only receiving a hum with no RX. I conducted some resistance measurements at all tube sockets and every measurement was nominal (according to my NC-57 manual) except for pin 6 of tube 7 (6V6GT). The manual indicates a resistance reading of 380K ohms and I'm receiving around 50K ohms (same as pin 3 and pin 4). To be honest, I can't see how pin 6 should be 380K ohms. The output transformer primary shunt resistor is 22K ohms and everything is wired correctly at the tube socket. I double checked my work and carefully reviewed the schematics -- everything looks good. I'm really stumped here... Any help would be greatly appreciated! Chris, N4JOY There is either a wiring error or a defective component. Pin 6 of the tube socket is not used by the tube, so it is obviously used as a tie-point. Trace in both directions from pin 6 and you should find the problem. Hmmmmm... Are you certain that each tube is in it's correct socket?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thank you for your reply. I just double checked each tube socket and all tubes are installed correctly. You are right about pin 6 of 6V6GT (tube 7) being used as a tie point. One end of a .1uf cap and 22K resistor are soldered to pin 6 (the other end of the .1uf cap goes to the tone switch). Pin 6 is also jumpered to pin 3, which then connects to the speaker (output) transformer. Pin 4 has the other end of the 22K resistor soldered and another lead to the speaker transformer. There are also two wires leaving pin 4 of 6V6GT: one goes to the reception switch and the other to the voltage regulator (pin 4). I left the wiring alone during my repairs so either the value of 380K ohms in the NC-57 chart is a typo (unlikely) or perhaps the 6V6GT is defective? I did try to inject a signal via the antenna connectors with my RF signal generator... still no luck. I just have a slight hum and no RX. Chris, N4JOY The junction of the 0.1uf cap and 22K ohm resistor is at the plate of the tube. I hate to be obvious but are you counting the pins in the right direction? The 22K resistor goes between plate and screen grid of the 6V6. See if your hum changes with the volume control. The control is on the grid of the first audio tube and from that plate to the grid of the 6V6. If there is no change in hum level the problem is probably after the first audio, or nothing is getting to the grid. If the hum does change the problem is probably in the detector circuit somewhere. If you can try signal tracing the audio path. My guess is that your eye keeps missing some miswired connection. That happens all the time. Perhaps you can get someone else to go over the stuff you replaced. Sometimes another person will spot a moved wire or short right away when you have struggled with it for hours. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA Since posting this I've discovered that there are two versions of the NC-57, the 57 and the 57B. They are not quite alike. The NC-57 that appears in the Sams Photofact booklet is the B version. Since that has socket resistance values and the National handbooks do not I assume that is what you have. The handbooks for both the NC-57 and the 57B are available on the BAMA site. One difference is the location of the volume control. In the B version the control is as I described, that is, at the grid of the first audio stage. In the first version it is at the grid of the output stage. If you have an original NC-57 and have been following the schematic in the Sams Photofact folder you may have been mislead in your wiring. Its certainly worth checking. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA |
#9
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I appreciate everyone's suggestions. Per Richard's great advice, I
verified that the NC-57 I own is indeed a NC-57B. Also, the slight hum does change in volume. However, I noticed that my 6SL7 (AF amp- BFO) was only slightly warm to the touch while the other tubes were obviously quite hot after several minutes. Perhaps I have a filament going out or the tube has failed. I'll replace the 6SL7 and update the group. Hopefully this will work! Chris, N4JOY |
#10
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![]() "N4JOY" wrote in message ... I appreciate everyone's suggestions. Per Richard's great advice, I verified that the NC-57 I own is indeed a NC-57B. Also, the slight hum does change in volume. However, I noticed that my 6SL7 (AF amp- BFO) was only slightly warm to the touch while the other tubes were obviously quite hot after several minutes. Perhaps I have a filament going out or the tube has failed. I'll replace the 6SL7 and update the group. Hopefully this will work! Chris, N4JOY Check the voltages at the tube socket. Its possible there is a cold solder joint at the filament. Note that only part of the heat of a tube comes from the filament so beng warm but not hot may not indicate a bad tube but may indicate the HV is not there. Make sure the "send/receive" switch has not failed. That would cause a similar problem. All of the handbooks have charts showing voltages at the tube sockets. These should be checked with the tubes in place, either at the bottom of the socket or by using a socket extender. There may be a clue there. Also, don't trust the replacement resistors and capacitors to be working. While they are in general quite reliable you may have gotten a bad one so they should be checked. I have a feeling this is something very simple of the sort making you say Doh! when you find it:-) BTW, the NC-57 looks like a very good little receiver, probably better than its competition the Hallicrafters S-40. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA |
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