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![]() "COLIN LAMB" wrote in message m... The combination is very good. The B&W has excellent audio and is very well built and mannered. The SX-101 is a wonderful receiver and is a joy to QSY with. I used one for years on 10 meters and it was so much more convenient to tune the band than the S-line. The later SX-101A has a product detector, but eliminates 160 meters. With a home built quad on 10-15-20 meters, I worked over 150 countries on 10 meters in just a couple of years. Of course the high bands were a bit better then. I just started restoring an SX-101A to put back on the air. It is in good shape, but someone painted the cabinet a puke silver-green. That has to go soon. I remember when we took this stuff out on Field Day and cranked up the surplus 5 kw generator that had its own trailer. The only thing bad about the SX-101 I had is that when the heater came on, while on 10 meter cw, the frequency would gradually change. At first I thought it was the oscillator plate voltage regulation. But, in fact, it was the filament voltage dropping. The good news, however, was that the oscillator tube was a 12BY7 and had its own transformer (which was left on all the time). I built a voltage regulator and that sucker stayed put when my heater came on. A couple friends had the B&W and they both sounded very good. One of them had mounted the T/R relay on the back of the B&W and when they first came on the air, you could hear the "klunk". Seems almost like yesterday. I think they were having a gas war during the summer and it was 19 cents a gallon. Gee, I am almost getting teary eyed. Calibration is not that good, but otherwise it is a fine receiver. 73, Colin K7FM A lot of receivers have problems with unregulated filaments. After moving to a new location I found my SP-600 would take off and drift off frequency. Not broken, just large line voltage variations. The cure for that was to run it from a Sola constant voltage transformer. Many receivers had filament regulators, usually Amperite balast tubes. These work but require a filament transformer with enough extra voltage to make up for the drop. If run within ratings they are reasonably long lived but still tend to go when most inconvenient. There are oscillators that are immune from reasonable changes in filament or B voltage changes. For instance, a properly designed electron-coupled oscillator, essentially the type used in the Collins PTO's, but they are rare in commercial transmitting or receiving equipment. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#12
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![]() On Sun, 22 Mar 2009, Unca Pete wrote: Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2009 16:24:03 -0400 From: Unca Pete Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors Subject: B&W 5100, SX-101 combo Any comments, just ended up owning these two boatanchors... Lets see now, you were reading in sailboat magazines that there was a national shortage of cheap anchors? ;-) .....and ballast for the keel? ;-) |
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