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I have a NC-109 that I am trying to get working. The radio does receive and
all the functions work somewhat. The problems are the S-meter will not zero and the tuning does not track across each band. On each band the radio will align on the lower end and as you tune up in freq across the band it goes off freq up to 2 mhz with decreased sensitivity. The broadcast band (A) does track ok but has decreased sensitivity on the upper end. The schematic set I have was down loaded from BAMA. This schematic shows that both the H.F osc and the meter amp should have 105 volts on the plate which is fed from a 0B2 vr tube. There is 58 volts on these plates. The vr tube circuit does not match the schematics, nor does the ssb/cw det tube circuit. My question is should I attempt to try to return the unit to match the schematic or should I assume that this was a factory change to the unit. The wiring does look different than the original in these areas. Thanks for your help. Bob WC0D |
#2
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![]() "Bob Fay" wrote in message ... I have a NC-109 that I am trying to get working. The radio does receive and all the functions work somewhat. The problems are the S-meter will not zero and the tuning does not track across each band. On each band the radio will align on the lower end and as you tune up in freq across the band it goes off freq up to 2 mhz with decreased sensitivity. The broadcast band (A) does track ok but has decreased sensitivity on the upper end. The schematic set I have was down loaded from BAMA. This schematic shows that both the H.F osc and the meter amp should have 105 volts on the plate which is fed from a 0B2 vr tube. There is 58 volts on these plates. The vr tube circuit does not match the schematics, nor does the ssb/cw det tube circuit. My question is should I attempt to try to return the unit to match the schematic or should I assume that this was a factory change to the unit. The wiring does look different than the original in these areas. Thanks for your help. Bob WC0D it's likely several resistors have gone waay up in value. It's not unusual to find some that have gone up 50% that may explain the low plate voltages. I'd take an ohmmeter to most every resistor in the radio. If it measures higher than spec by more than 10%, I'd replace it. If it measures lower, it could still be bad and have a parallel shunt path around it. These you have to lift one end out of the circuit to check. Tedious, but necessary. Also, did you replace any capacitors? Most of the coupling capacitors are likely to be leaky, especially if they're the early plastic-cased kind. Leaky coupling caps are going to kill the bias vltages, leading to an off-zero S-meter and lowered B+. I'd replace all the caps of 0.005 uf and more. The ones smaller than this are probably ceramic or mica and those hardly ever leak. It's possible somebody misaligned the radio, or dust and grease has increased the stray capacitance across the tuning capacitor, or maybe it just needs realignment. There should be a bunch of little trimmer caps that set the oscillator and tuned front end circuits at the top end of each band. These may need alignment and/or cleaning. Good luck, George |
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