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#1
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I've had an old Hallicrafter's S-108 since the early 70's, and trying
to tell what freq I'm on is impossible. Does anyone know of a method for installing a crystal oscillator on this old tube rcvr, or some other method of acurately determining which frequency the radio is receiving at the moment? Many thanks for the help! -- Allen McBroom www.NPSTKD.com Remove WOOF when replying by email |
#2
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![]() "Allen McBroom" wrote in message . 97.132... I've had an old Hallicrafter's S-108 since the early 70's, and trying to tell what freq I'm on is impossible. Does anyone know of a method for installing a crystal oscillator on this old tube rcvr, or some other method of acurately determining which frequency the radio is receiving at the moment? The old classic way was a 100KC crystal calibrator. More modern displays sample the VFO, add in the IF and display the count. Many thanks for the help! -- Allen McBroom www.NPSTKD.com Remove WOOF when replying by email |
#3
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It would be easier by far to build (or buy) your own external oscillator.
This will not only work with your S-108 but with anything else you might buy down the road, and you won't have to hack holes in your radio. The basic one is just a crystal oscillator with a 100kHz crystal. Fancier ones will allow you to switch in a 1MHz crystal. I have an old Heathkit one that I hopped up by adding a divider to get marks at 100, 50 and 25kHz for aligning narrow-spread QRP receivers. I know that any ARRL Handbook from 1930 to 1976 will have such a circuit -- I'd be mildly surprised to find out that a later one lacked it, but I'm too lazy to get up right now and check. The 100kHz crystals are still available from places like JAN Crystals and International Radio (http://www.qth.com/inrad/). You can pretty much decide what you want the thing to look like, select the appropriate date handbook and start cutting metal. "Allen McBroom" wrote in message . 97.132... I've had an old Hallicrafter's S-108 since the early 70's, and trying to tell what freq I'm on is impossible. Does anyone know of a method for installing a crystal oscillator on this old tube rcvr, or some other method of acurately determining which frequency the radio is receiving at the moment? Many thanks for the help! -- Allen McBroom www.NPSTKD.com Remove WOOF when replying by email |
#4
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![]() "Tim Wescott" wrote in message ... It would be easier by far to build (or buy) your own external oscillator. This will not only work with your S-108 but with anything else you might buy down the road, and you won't have to hack holes in your radio. The basic one is just a crystal oscillator with a 100kHz crystal. Fancier ones will allow you to switch in a 1MHz crystal. I have an old Heathkit one that I hopped up by adding a divider to get marks at 100, 50 and 25kHz for aligning narrow-spread QRP receivers. I know that any ARRL Handbook from 1930 to 1976 will have such a circuit -- I'd be mildly surprised to find out that a later one lacked it, but I'm too lazy to get up right now and check. The 100kHz crystals are still available from places like JAN Crystals and International Radio (http://www.qth.com/inrad/). You can pretty much decide what you want the thing to look like, select the appropriate date handbook and start cutting metal. There's also plans for crystal calibrators on the net. Here's one: http://www.rason.org/Projects/calibrat/calibrat.htm Frank Dresser |
#5
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I would simply use a divide by ten oscilloscope probe
connected to the plate of the S-108 local oscillator tube, feeding a frequency counter. The divide by ten probe provides isolation, to avoid pulling the oscillator off frequency. If you just want a 100 KHz calibrator, I recommend an old Bud Radio model "FCC-90 B". It has it's own power supply, and requires no connection to the receiver. (Just uses a loosely coupled antenna wire near the receiver input). It has two tubes, a 35W4 and a 50C5, in a transformerless circuit. The older Bud model FCC-90 used octal tubes. 73, Ed Knobloch Allen McBroom wrote: I've had an old Hallicrafter's S-108 since the early 70's, and trying to tell what freq I'm on is impossible. Does anyone know of a method for installing a crystal oscillator on this old tube rcvr, or some other method of acurately determining which frequency the radio is receiving at the moment? Many thanks for the help! |
#6
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Edward Knobloch wrote:
I would simply use a divide by ten oscilloscope probe connected to the plate of the S-108 local oscillator tube, feeding a frequency counter. The divide by ten probe provides isolation, to avoid pulling the oscillator off frequency. If you just want a 100 KHz calibrator, I recommend an old Bud Radio model "FCC-90 B". It has it's own power supply, and requires no connection to the receiver. (Just uses a loosely coupled antenna wire near the receiver input). It has two tubes, a 35W4 and a 50C5, in a transformerless circuit. The older Bud model FCC-90 used octal tubes. 73, Ed Knobloch While all of the previous comments are good advice I suspect a counter would drive a guy crazy on an S-108 with the constantly drifting freq and oscillator pulling. The 100kc calibrator will get you in the ballpark...at least to as close as you can read the dial...I don't recall that there's a front panel tweak to align the pointer or LO to have the calibrator line up with the dial. Nice little radio but if you want a better radio, well... Its kinda like sticking STP racing stickers on a Chevy Vega. -Bill |
#7
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![]() "-Bill M-" exray@coquidotnet wrote in message ... While all of the previous comments are good advice I suspect a counter would drive a guy crazy on an S-108 with the constantly drifting freq and oscillator pulling. The 100kc calibrator will get you in the ballpark...at least to as close as you can read the dial...I don't recall that there's a front panel tweak to align the pointer or LO to have the calibrator line up with the dial. Nice little radio but if you want a better radio, well... Its kinda like sticking STP racing stickers on a Chevy Vega. -Bill The bandspread is marked off with a 0 - 100 interval. If the operator notes the number of bandspread divisions between known 100 kc intervals, he can come up with a reasonably precise approximation of the actual frequency. Good enough for SWLing, anyway. Frank Dresser |
#8
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Frank Dresser wrote:
"-Bill M-" exray@coquidotnet wrote in message ... While all of the previous comments are good advice I suspect a counter would drive a guy crazy on an S-108 with the constantly drifting freq and oscillator pulling. The 100kc calibrator will get you in the ballpark...at least to as close as you can read the dial...I don't recall that there's a front panel tweak to align the pointer or LO to have the calibrator line up with the dial. Nice little radio but if you want a better radio, well... Its kinda like sticking STP racing stickers on a Chevy Vega. -Bill The bandspread is marked off with a 0 - 100 interval. If the operator notes the number of bandspread divisions between known 100 kc intervals, he can come up with a reasonably precise approximation of the actual frequency. Good enough for SWLing, anyway. Frank Dresser I suppose so. On a 'factory aligned" job one still might have to struggle with which 100kc blip is which. -Bill M |
#9
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Edward Knobloch ) writes:
I would simply use a divide by ten oscilloscope probe connected to the plate of the S-108 local oscillator tube, feeding a frequency counter. The divide by ten probe provides isolation, to avoid pulling the oscillator off frequency. If you just want a 100 KHz calibrator, I recommend an old Bud Radio model "FCC-90 B". It has it's own power supply, and requires no connection to the receiver. (Just uses a loosely coupled antenna wire near the receiver input). It has two tubes, a 35W4 and a 50C5, in a transformerless circuit. The older Bud model FCC-90 used octal tubes. 73, Ed Knobloch Nobody has to go back that far. You can go back thirty to thirty five years, and crystal calibrators were solid state. Not just that, but they had a divider so you could get multiple outputs. This is real useful for the especially ill-calibrated receiver (start witha 1 MHz output because they are easier to count), and those 25KHz outputs were useful even for the better calibrated receivers, to find those subbands. And realistically, once transistors and then digital ICs became available, crystal calibrators were amongst some of the first station accessories to be turned solid-state. And they were applied at the time to many a real boatanchor. Michael VE2BVW Allen McBroom wrote: I've had an old Hallicrafter's S-108 since the early 70's, and trying to tell what freq I'm on is impossible. Does anyone know of a method for installing a crystal oscillator on this old tube rcvr, or some other method of acurately determining which frequency the radio is receiving at the moment? Many thanks for the help! |
#10
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![]() "-Bill M-" exray@coquidotnet wrote in message ... I suppose so. On a 'factory aligned" job one still might have to struggle with which 100kc blip is which. -Bill M Not to mention images and unmodulated carriers. Actually, I never used a crystal calibrator. I'd count off the divisions between two known SW broadcasters and divide difference in frequency by the number of divisions and come up with a useful approximation. It's kind of a pain. And not so useful for the ham bands. Anyway, I haven't done it in years, and I never did it much. I mostly listen to the strong domestic SW stations now. Those non-linear bandspread capacitor plates on the S-38 and S-53 types will introduce more errors. Frank Dresser |
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