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#1
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Hi everyone, I am looking for a VR-300 ,( 95 - 130 volts, 60Hz Voltage Stibilizer ) by Acme electric or GE. used In BOONTON Q Meter 190A. Please, If available, let me know the value. Thank you in advance!
Last edited by Renan Cysneiros : May 16th 12 at 02:49 PM |
#2
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On Wed, 16 May 2012 04:43:12 +0000, Renan Cysneiros wrote:
Hi everyone, I am looking for a VR-300 ,( 95 - 130 volts, 60Hz Voltage Stibilizer ) used In BOONTON Q Meter 190A. Please, If available, let me know the value. Thank you in advance! I try not to wade in and correct folks' spelling in general, but if you're doing searches try "voltage stabilizer" -- that may help. -- My liberal friends think I'm a conservative kook. My conservative friends think I'm a liberal kook. Why am I not happy that they have found common ground? Tim Wescott, Communications, Control, Circuits & Software http://www.wescottdesign.com |
#3
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Tim Wescott wrote:
On Wed, 16 May 2012 04:43:12 +0000, Renan Cysneiros wrote: Hi everyone, I am looking for a VR-300 ,( 95 - 130 volts, 60Hz Voltage Stibilizer ) used In BOONTON Q Meter 190A. Please, If available, let me know the value. Thank you in advance! I try not to wade in and correct folks' spelling in general, but if you're doing searches try "voltage stabilizer" -- that may help. I'm curious what it is. I know of the VR-300 voltage stabilizer tube, which is a high voltage cold cathode tube for regulating DC. Are you looking for an outboard ferroresonant regulating transformer which would be used _with_ but not _in_ the meter? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
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I would like to thank you for your attention regarding my question, sorry I have not been very specific, I am referring to an old AC ferromagnetic voltage stabilizer used internally in Boonton Q meter model 190A whose reference circuit diagram is VR-300, are two types one manufactured by Acme electronic, model T-31370 t and another by General electric model 69G870 (input 95-130 volts, out 115 volt,60 HZ, 50 VA power), I know that a simple power transformer would solve the problem although it is more sensitive to variations of the electric Net, If I do not get an original, I'll have to make a slight modification, although I would like to leave it original shape. Thank you so much one more time ! Renan pp7hp |
#5
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Renan Cysneiros wrote:
I would like to thank you for your attention regarding my question, sorry I have not been very specific, I am referring to an old AC ferromagnetic voltage stabilizer used internally in Boonton Q meter model 190A whose reference circuit diagram is VR-300, are two types one manufactured by Acme electronic, model T-31370 t and another by General electric model 69G870 (input 95-130 volts, out 115 volt,60 HZ, 50 VA power), I know that a simple power transformer would solve the problem although it is more sensitive to variations of the electric Net, If I do not get an original, I'll have to make a slight modification, although I would like to leave it original shape. Thank you so much one more time ! Renan pp7hp Actually, you should not need the thing at all, you can just bypass it completely if you trust your line voltage. I have some Sola equivalents around here somewhere, and Sola still makes a direct replacement. That would be a Sola CVS series, type 23-12-060-2. Newark should have them in stock. Note that these MUST be used on 60 Hz power. Very bad things will happen if you try and use one on 50 Hz. So if you are living in a 50 Hz country and it has been removed, it was probably removed for a reason. You may be able to order a 50 Hz variant but I don't know the Sola number offhand. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Renan Cysneiros wrote: I would like to thank you for your attention regarding my question, sorry I have not been very specific, I am referring to an old AC ferromagnetic voltage stabilizer used internally in Boonton Q meter model 190A whose reference circuit diagram is VR-300, are two types one manufactured by Acme electronic, model T-31370 t and another by General electric model 69G870 (input 95-130 volts, out 115 volt,60 HZ, 50 VA power), I know that a simple power transformer would solve the problem although it is more sensitive to variations of the electric Net, If I do not get an original, I'll have to make a slight modification, although I would like to leave it original shape. Thank you so much one more time ! Renan pp7hp Actually, you should not need the thing at all, you can just bypass it completely if you trust your line voltage. I have some Sola equivalents around here somewhere, and Sola still makes a direct replacement. That would be a Sola CVS series, type 23-12-060-2. Newark should have them in stock. Note that these MUST be used on 60 Hz power. Very bad things will happen if you try and use one on 50 Hz. So if you are living in a 50 Hz country and it has been removed, it was probably removed for a reason. You may be able to order a 50 Hz variant but I don't know the Sola number offhand. --scott But note that in the 190-A if the CVT is removed the line goes directly to the HV rectifier. That may be OK but provides no isolation and perhaps a shock hazard. If a replacement CVT can't be found an isolation transformer would be a better solution than a direct connection. BTW, the CVT in my 190-A runs very hot, not normal I suspect although the voltage out is correct. Its a potted unit so there is not much I can investigate. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#7
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![]() "Renan Cysneiros" wrote in message ... Hi everyone, I am looking for a VR-300 ,( 95 - 130 volts, 60Hz Voltage Stibilizer ) used In BOONTON Q Meter 190A. Please, If available, let me know the value. Thank you in advance! -- Renan Cysneiros There are two mailing lists that may be of help. One is the Agilent-Hewlett-Packard list and the other is the Boonton list. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hp_agilent_equipment/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Boonton/ As you know Boonton Radio was bought by -hp- who continued to make several of the instruments. This is a very active list. Some of its members started a list dedicated to Boonton Radio and other equipment made in Boonton N.J. Not too active but may be of help. I suggest posting to both lists, you may be able to find a part. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#8
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On 05/19/2012 12:08 PM, Richard Knoppow wrote:
"Renan wrote in message ... Hi everyone, I am looking for a VR-300 ,( 95 - 130 volts, 60Hz Voltage Stibilizer ) used In BOONTON Q Meter 190A. Please, If available, let me know the value. Thank you in advance! -- Renan Cysneiros There are two mailing lists that may be of help. One is the Agilent-Hewlett-Packard list and the other is the Boonton list. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hp_agilent_equipment/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Boonton/ As you know Boonton Radio was bought by -hp- who continued to make several of the instruments. This is a very active list. Some of its members started a list dedicated to Boonton Radio and other equipment made in Boonton N.J. Not too active but may be of help. I suggest posting to both lists, you may be able to find a part. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL Richard- Thanks for the Yahoo groups info. I didn't know about those two. I joined the Boonton group as I have a couple of 260A's both in need of repair to some degree. Now if I can just find some time to work on them... 73, David K3KY |
#9
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![]() "Clutter" wrote in message ... On 05/19/2012 12:08 PM, Richard Knoppow wrote: "Renan wrote in message ... Hi everyone, I am looking for a VR-300 ,( 95 - 130 volts, 60Hz Voltage Stibilizer ) used In BOONTON Q Meter 190A. Please, If available, let me know the value. Thank you in advance! -- Renan Cysneiros There are two mailing lists that may be of help. One is the Agilent-Hewlett-Packard list and the other is the Boonton list. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hp_agilent_equipment/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Boonton/ As you know Boonton Radio was bought by -hp- who continued to make several of the instruments. This is a very active list. Some of its members started a list dedicated to Boonton Radio and other equipment made in Boonton N.J. Not too active but may be of help. I suggest posting to both lists, you may be able to find a part. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL Richard- Thanks for the Yahoo groups info. I didn't know about those two. I joined the Boonton group as I have a couple of 260A's both in need of repair to some degree. Now if I can just find some time to work on them... 73, David K3KY There are probably a few people on one or the other of those groups who know the 260A well. At -hp- all the Boonton stuff was done by a couple of specialists who did nothing else. I think the 260A is reasonably easy to get operational, the 250A RX meter was a bear to get calibrated and the older 160A Q-Meter requires a special tube which was selected. Boonton liked using selected tubes, one of the 202 series RF generators used three tubes of the same type but selected for different characteristics. A royal PITA. There have been a couple of other Q meters made but the 260A is still an excellent instrument. The trouble is that most people now have no idea of what they do or how to use one. -- -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#10
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In article ,
Richard Knoppow wrote: "Clutter" wrote in message ... On 05/19/2012 12:08 PM, Richard Knoppow wrote: "Renan wrote in message ... Hi everyone, I am looking for a VR-300 ,( 95 - 130 volts, 60Hz Voltage Stibilizer ) used In BOONTON Q Meter 190A. Please, If available, let me know the value. Thank you in advance! There are two mailing lists that may be of help. One is the Agilent-Hewlett-Packard list and the other is the Boonton list. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hp_agilent_equipment/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Boonton/ Thanks for the Yahoo groups info. I didn't know about those two. I joined the Boonton group as I have a couple of 260A's both in need of repair to some degree. Now if I can just find some time to work on them... There are probably a few people on one or the other of those groups who know the 260A well. At -hp- all the Boonton stuff was done by a couple of specialists who did nothing else. I think the 260A is reasonably easy to get operational, the 250A RX meter was a bear to get calibrated and the older 160A Q-Meter requires a special tube which was selected. Boonton liked using selected tubes, one of the 202 series RF generators used three tubes of the same type but selected for different characteristics. A royal PITA. There have been a couple of other Q meters made but the 260A is still an excellent instrument. The trouble is that most people now have no idea of what they do or how to use one. I have to chuckle at the idea that people don't know the value of Boonton Q meters and the 250A RX bridge. I cut my teeth on the 160A and 190A Q meters and the 250A when I went to work for James Millen in 1956. Forty years later, when equipping a bench for doing some serious work with boatanchors, I located a 260A---got it working, but it was a cosmetic horror, so when someone gave me a non-working but cosmetically clean 260A with a tentative diagnosis of a burned-out thermocouple, I took it. However, it turned out that the thermocouple was not burned out, just had a bad solder connection at one end of the heater wire. The 260A (as I recall, a 1953 redesign of the mid-1930's 160A) is not particularly difficult to work on. Biggest problem I found with both was poor contact with the oscillator turret pins and open oscillator coils. The open coils all were breakage at the turret pins, very easy fix. But the brass pins and contacts took abrasive work to get them to make contact. DeOxit D-5 didn't touch them. The 160A used a selected 45 tube for the oscillator, and the thermocouple burned out quite easily. The 260A uses an off-the-shelf tube--5763 as I recall---so that component is a plug-and-play replacement. The 260A thermocouple is much more robust. I've forgotten what was in the 190A, though I've been inside all of them at one time or another. The VTVM tube is selected in all of them. Boonton supported these units with excellent manuals which go into great detail about how they can be use. That's true of the RX Bridge as well. The Q-meters are not at all difficult to calibrate by the procedures given by Boonton. When push comes to shove, there is nothing like a good Q-meter when dealing with boatanchor front-end and IF coils. One strand of broken Litzendraht drop the Q of a coil significantly, and having a Q-meter available to get the exact capacitor needed for a silver-mica failure makes life very simple. Of course, a Measurements Megacycle Meter or Millen Grid Dip complement them nicely, but aren't substitutes. The 250A RX Bridge was, I think, a bit daunting for 1930's/1940's radio EE's. The Chief Engineer at Millen, Wade Caywood, bought one for the company, and spent quite a bit of time experimenting with how best to use it. Mine came out from under a table at a hamfest---not working, but looked brand new, and when the guy said he wanted $20 for it I swapped cash for the bridge and immediately took it out to my car. All that was wrong with it was that the Amperex ballast tube was open, so no voltage to the IF strip heaters. I just used wire-wound resistors to set the voltage. I don't recall having to fix any oscillator problems, but the mica dialectric in the little capacitor at the front of the bridge had to be reglued in place (Pliobond). The bridge was calibrated after it was assembled, so you really do not want to fuss with it. I'd have to say that to get real mileage out of these boxes, particularly the RX bridge, you've got to know a bit more than you're going to learn from the ARRL Handbooks or Fred Terman's texts. I have used the Marconi Q-meter, which also uses a special (read "unobtainium") tube, but you have to have both of the power oscillators that go with it. Heathkit made a Q-meter kit that was patterned after the Boonton, but simplified. I had one of these for years, and got quite a bit of use out of it, but the 260A is a step up in capability and accuracy. I'm not sure what Boonton was thinking when they put the voltage stabilizers in the Q-meters and the ballast in the RX bridge. Unless your primary power is seriously off-voltage, I don't see that they are needed. Hank |
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