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#1
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Hi All,
I recently was given two "Command" receivers from a sk estate, and would like to get them going (restoration would be a bit tooo ambitious - too many extra holes, mods, hacks). This is my first "vintage" project, and would welcome comment on the following (to me) weird points. They were bolted together (literally) a BC453 (190Khz to 550Khz) and a BC455 (6 to 9.1Mhz).The hf one fed the LF one, the BC453 being used presumably as a "tunable IF - well and good, except that The 2nd and 3rd IF transformers on the BC455 had been replaced with ones marked "85Khz" - the first IF/Converter one was 2.83 Mhz, which is how it was meant to be. Given that the BC453 wouldnt tune EITHER of these 2 "IF" frequencies, something radical has been done to them! My question - was this some sort of popular surplus conversion - does anyone have any idea on how to un-do this butchery - I dont have "spare" 2.83Mhz if cans, so......am I better of trying to do something with these, or throwing them back into storage until I find something thats a more realistic prospect of repair, and keeping these for spare parts? I do have the AN/ARC5 manual on my PC, in djvu format - Its cumbersome, to say the least - not searchable, and at 350 pages, too big to print out. Any "quick and simple" guides to these things? Oh, and BTW - the tube mix is all over the place, all 6 volts, one IF replaced by a 6AC7 - most of the rest unreadable due age etc. And a 6F6 on the BC453 as an audio output tube... Help!!!! de VK3BFA Andrew. |
#2
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Hi Andrew,
Tried to reply direct to your posting but the sever says your mailbox is full! 73, "Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in message oups.com... Hi All, I recently was given two "Command" receivers from a sk estate, and would like to get them going (restoration would be a bit tooo ambitious - too many extra holes, mods, hacks). This is my first "vintage" project, and would welcome comment on the following (to me) weird points. They were bolted together (literally) a BC453 (190Khz to 550Khz) and a BC455 (6 to 9.1Mhz).The hf one fed the LF one, the BC453 being used presumably as a "tunable IF - well and good, except that The 2nd and 3rd IF transformers on the BC455 had been replaced with ones marked "85Khz" - the first IF/Converter one was 2.83 Mhz, which is how it was meant to be. Given that the BC453 wouldnt tune EITHER of these 2 "IF" frequencies, something radical has been done to them! My question - was this some sort of popular surplus conversion - does anyone have any idea on how to un-do this butchery - I dont have "spare" 2.83Mhz if cans, so......am I better of trying to do something with these, or throwing them back into storage until I find something thats a more realistic prospect of repair, and keeping these for spare parts? I do have the AN/ARC5 manual on my PC, in djvu format - Its cumbersome, to say the least - not searchable, and at 350 pages, too big to print out. Any "quick and simple" guides to these things? Oh, and BTW - the tube mix is all over the place, all 6 volts, one IF replaced by a 6AC7 - most of the rest unreadable due age etc. And a 6F6 on the BC453 as an audio output tube... Help!!!! de VK3BFA Andrew. |
#3
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sorry, its my old ISP - I never changed my address here in groups (and,
funny - no spam either at the new ISP). try ageinghippy1athotmail.com. And thanks for your efforts - just assumed replies would be here..... Andrew VK3BFA |
#4
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Good Day, Andrew.
I assume these are actual SCR-274N Army sets and not AN/ARC-5 or ARA (three different models, all usually and incorrectly lumped together as "ARC-5"). Unless these are uncommon sets- which would be black wrinkle and have a tag marked both "SIGNAL CORPS US ARMY" and "AIRCRAFT RADIO CORP," and have a contract of 1470-NY-41, then they sound too far gone for reasonable restoration efforts. Later version SCR-274N receivers in better shape are common. Examples with modest modifications that are easily reversed, such as the "standard" controls in the drawer, are much less expensive than unmolested sets. But if you prefer the challenge, you'll need a different manual. The AN/ARC-5 receivers are not wired the same as the earlier SCR-274N and the diagrams are not compatible. What does it say on the nomenclature tags of your sets? That will help with finding the right diagrams. 73 Dave AB5S p.s. If they are Aircraft Radio Corp. SCR-274N, they are worth a big restoration effort. |
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