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#1
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Was Q37's leads to the IF circuit board. Somehow it
developed circular cracks in the solder joint from the leads to the board. It kept the rig from going into transmit. It was just a control line level shifter or inverter. Oddly enough I had just finished installing a new wire dipole strung between trees on my house's quarter acre lot. Something vaguely resembling a 80 meter dipole with a W2AU balun at the feedpoint. I thought that I somehow toasted the xmit part of the rig with a bad antenna, but the rig has self protection circuits. I don't think bad solder joints on a control line transistor would be caused by a new antenna.... :-) |
#2
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Just curious, had the rig ever been used mobile? I had my TS690 mobile
for a while and saw how badly it shook around and pulled it out and put it back into home use, sitting on a nice and stable table with no astronaut crippling g-loads. I like the rig too much to have kept beating it up in the truck. I bought a much smaller (thus easier to get solid mounting) Yaesu 857 for the truck and it seems to fair much better than the large (heavy) Kenwood did in that environment... Scott N0EDV Robert Casey wrote: Was Q37's leads to the IF circuit board. Somehow it developed circular cracks in the solder joint from the leads to the board. It kept the rig from going into transmit. It was just a control line level shifter or inverter. Oddly enough I had just finished installing a new wire dipole strung between trees on my house's quarter acre lot. Something vaguely resembling a 80 meter dipole with a W2AU balun at the feedpoint. I thought that I somehow toasted the xmit part of the rig with a bad antenna, but the rig has self protection circuits. I don't think bad solder joints on a control line transistor would be caused by a new antenna.... :-) -- Scott http://corbenflyer.tripod.com/ Building RV-4 Gotta Fly or Gonna Die |
#3
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Scott wrote:
Just curious, had the rig ever been used mobile? I had my TS690 mobile for a while and saw how badly it shook around and pulled it out and put it back into home use, sitting on a nice and stable table with no astronaut crippling g-loads. I like the rig too much to have kept beating it up in the truck. I bought a much smaller (thus easier to get solid mounting) Yaesu 857 for the truck and it seems to fair much better than the large (heavy) Kenwood did in that environment... I got it used, so I don't know its early history. It was nice and clean, so I suspect it had not gone mobile. I think that the circuit board may have been a tad bit short of solder when they wave soldered it at the factory. Not by much though. It has always been a home rig when I've had it. One annoying thing with the service manual is that it has the schematics of each board, but no diagram of the interconnections between boards. Other than a high level system block diagram. I was going to try to back track the "on air" LED to find why if failed to light, but couldn't find it in the service manual. Major surgery would be required to trace it out by hand, so I took another approach. That was to see how far the control line "RL" signal got thru the various transistors. That's when I found the bad solder joints. |
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