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#1
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I am looking for the schematic and (hopefully) the assembly instructions for
a frequency converter (6m? or 2m?) kit Model FCV-2 that was sold by International Crystal Mfg. Co. of Oklahoma City. It uses two tubes. I have the kit (NIB) and all the parts - but I don't have the schematic or the instructions. Help? Anyone. Thanks, Bruce KB0PZD |
#2
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![]() "Bruce & Judy" wrote in message ... I am looking for the schematic and (hopefully) the assembly instructions for a frequency converter (6m? or 2m?) kit Model FCV-2 that was sold by International Crystal Mfg. Co. of Oklahoma City. It uses two tubes. I have the kit (NIB) and all the parts - but I don't have the schematic or the instructions. Help? Anyone. Thanks, Bruce KB0PZD ICM is still in business... Long shot, but they might be able to help if you get no responses here. |
#3
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![]() "Bruce & Judy" wrote in message ... I am looking for the schematic and (hopefully) the assembly instructions for a frequency converter (6m? or 2m?) kit Model FCV-2 that was sold by International Crystal Mfg. Co. of Oklahoma City. It uses two tubes. I have the kit (NIB) and all the parts - but I don't have the schematic or the instructions. Help? Anyone. Thanks, Bruce KB0PZD ICM is still in business... Long shot, but they might be able to help if you get no responses here. |
#4
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Bruce & Judy wrote:
I am looking for the schematic and (hopefully) the assembly instructions for a frequency converter (6m? or 2m?) kit Model FCV-2 that was sold by International Crystal Mfg. Co. of Oklahoma City. It uses two tubes. I have the kit (NIB) and all the parts - but I don't have the schematic or the instructions. Help? Anyone. Thanks, Bruce KB0PZD Contact ICM! They still have instruction sheets on some of the modules they sold in the 1980s.... I would not be surprised if they didn't have instruction sheets on the earlier ones as well. What is the front end tube used on this one? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#5
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Yesterday I got an e-mail back from my query and they did send a .pdf file
of an advertising sheet with the schematic. There is enough information here that I believe someone could put this kit together and make it work. It uses a 6BQ7A in a cascode RF amplifier with a 6U8 oscillator/ mixer. The poop sheet claims 0.5 microvolt sensitivity. This particular converter has an output of 7-11 Mhz. Somebody with knowledge of VHF and a good set of hands could have a lot of fun with this. By the 1980's, Nuvistor tubes (6CW4, etc) had pretty well become the standard for 2m RF amps and converters. The info from ICM shows a retail price of $12.95 for the kit, so I rather believe it is from the late 1960's or early 1970's. I would still like to find the complete original construction information for this FCV-2 converter kit. Bruce KB0PZD "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Bruce & Judy wrote: I am looking for the schematic and (hopefully) the assembly instructions for a frequency converter (6m? or 2m?) kit Model FCV-2 that was sold by International Crystal Mfg. Co. of Oklahoma City. It uses two tubes. I have the kit (NIB) and all the parts - but I don't have the schematic or the instructions. Help? Anyone. Thanks, Bruce KB0PZD Contact ICM! They still have instruction sheets on some of the modules they sold in the 1980s.... I would not be surprised if they didn't have instruction sheets on the earlier ones as well. What is the front end tube used on this one? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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I purchased some Hammarlund transmitter crystals from them a year or so ago.
Very helpful and knew exactly what I needed. Paul P. "Tio Pedro" wrote in message ... "Bruce & Judy" wrote in message ... I am looking for the schematic and (hopefully) the assembly instructions for a frequency converter (6m? or 2m?) kit Model FCV-2 that was sold by International Crystal Mfg. Co. of Oklahoma City. It uses two tubes. I have the kit (NIB) and all the parts - but I don't have the schematic or the instructions. Help? Anyone. Thanks, Bruce KB0PZD ICM is still in business... Long shot, but they might be able to help if you get no responses here. |
#7
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![]() "Bruce & Judy" wrote in message ... Somebody with knowledge of VHF and a good set of hands could have a lot of fun with this. By the 1980's, Nuvistor tubes (6CW4, etc) had pretty well become the standard for 2m RF amps and converters. The info from ICM shows a retail price of $12.95 for the kit, so I rather believe it is from the late 1960's or early 1970's. The Nuvistors were history before the 80s. Ameco converters were using them in the 60s. Pete Pete |
#8
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Tio Pedro wrote:
"Bruce & Judy" wrote in message ... Somebody with knowledge of VHF and a good set of hands could have a lot of fun with this. By the 1980's, Nuvistor tubes (6CW4, etc) had pretty well become the standard for 2m RF amps and converters. The info from ICM shows a retail price of $12.95 for the kit, so I rather believe it is from the late 1960's or early 1970's. The Nuvistors were history before the 80s. Ameco converters were using them in the 60s. And to be honest, some of the frame grid tubes were almost as good. I had a converter built from a TV tuner with a 5X8 that was really quite marvelous on 2M. Has anyone seen any of the compactron TV tuners? I remember hearing good things about them at the time. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#9
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On Wed, 12 Nov 2008, Bruce & Judy wrote:
Yesterday I got an e-mail back from my query and they did send a .pdf file of an advertising sheet with the schematic. There is enough information here that I believe someone could put this kit together and make it work. It uses a 6BQ7A in a cascode RF amplifier with a 6U8 oscillator/ mixer. The poop sheet claims 0.5 microvolt sensitivity. This particular converter has an output of 7-11 Mhz. Somebody with knowledge of VHF and a good set of hands could have a lot of fun with this. By the 1980's, Nuvistor tubes (6CW4, etc) had pretty well become the standard for 2m RF amps and converters. The info from ICM shows a retail price of $12.95 for the kit, so I rather believe it is from the late 1960's or early 1970's. I would still like to find the complete original construction information for this FCV-2 converter kit. Bruce KB0PZD No, it's most likely late fifties, or very early sixties, since shortly into the sixties Nuvistors became king for converters (unless you had a 417 or better 416, or a parametric amplifier). By the later sixties JFETs were taking over, they were in converter construction articles about 1965, followed shortly afterwards by Mosfets, which came around about the time they realized how to use bipolar transistors properly for receiving. Checking old magazines would offer up a date, and I decided to do that. The ICM ad in the December 1958 issue of "CQ" shows it among other of their small kits. I had thought the model was descriptive of the band it was supposed to tune (so it would be for 2 metres and an FCV-6 would be for 6 metres) but apparently it came for both bands, "model 50" for six and "model 144" for two. The ad shows the price as $12.95 without tubes, $17.95 with tubes. It doesn't say, but a lot of their kits were flexible, so you could specify the output frequency (within reason), they'd designed the kits to accomodate some level of change by the subsitution of a coil or two (and of course the crystal). It's the sort of thing that would have gotten a review somewhere, but I'm not looking and I don't have a complete collection of back issues. At least you know the era now. It was likely a fairly standard converter for the time. Even when Nuvistors came along, they were sometimes just used as a low noise rf stage ahead of a 6U8 mixer/oscillator stage. Michael VE2BVW "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Bruce & Judy wrote: I am looking for the schematic and (hopefully) the assembly instructions for a frequency converter (6m? or 2m?) kit Model FCV-2 that was sold by International Crystal Mfg. Co. of Oklahoma City. It uses two tubes. I have the kit (NIB) and all the parts - but I don't have the schematic or the instructions. Help? Anyone. Thanks, Bruce KB0PZD Contact ICM! They still have instruction sheets on some of the modules they sold in the 1980s.... I would not be surprised if they didn't have instruction sheets on the earlier ones as well. What is the front end tube used on this one? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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