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#1
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Ok, sorry but, I have to ask some radio experts. My sons 4x4 remote truck
is NOT working properly. Seems the RF distance from the remote to the truck is only 2ft now, but was 10 blocks before. Yes, I installed NEW batteries in the remote unit (9v) and truck batt 100% charged. I took the truck apart and did a check on the wire antenna also. Continuity check was 100% no breaks in the wire. I also scrubbed and cleaned all contacts on both units too. Did a super cleaning with a blast of air. Still 2ft range to drive this Hummer. Arrrghhhhhh. What am I missing? It's on 49mhz as a freq. It's a shame that it only lasted less than 1 yr. Any other tips wud be appreciated. thanks |
#2
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![]() Daphne + Dave wrote: Ok, sorry but, I have to ask some radio experts. My sons 4x4 remote truck is NOT working properly. Seems the RF distance from the remote to the truck is only 2ft now, but was 10 blocks before. Yes, I installed NEW batteries in the remote unit (9v) and truck batt 100% charged. I took the truck apart and did a check on the wire antenna also. Continuity check was 100% no breaks in the wire. I also scrubbed and cleaned all contacts on both units too. Did a super cleaning with a blast of air. Still 2ft range to drive this Hummer. Arrrghhhhhh. What am I missing? It's on 49mhz as a freq. It's a shame that it only lasted less than 1 yr. Any other tips wud be appreciated. thanks Have you checked the antenna connection on the transmitter? 10 blocks for a 49mhz remote? That is pretty unbelievable but I will take your word for it. The fact that it works at 2 ft indicates the receiver and decoder and encoder are all working. My first place to look would be the antennas on both the receiver and the transmitter. Be certain to closely check the circuit board traces leading to the antenna, even to the point of using a strong magnifying glass. It is not unusual to see an almost microscopic break in a component solder joint and you may not see it without some sort of magnification. Second place I would look is the transmitter output power. Perhaps the final transistor in the tranmitter gave out and you are just running off the oscillator or a buffer stage. The third place I would check is receive sensitivity. It is possible you could have some sort of pre-amp transistor that has failed in the receiver. This is going to be a bit more trouble to check since you are not dealing with audio that you can hear and may need some test equipment to evaluate the various stages of the receiver. -- |
#3
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"Evan Platt" wrote in message
... On Sun, 10 Sep 2006 20:21:51 -0400, nitespark wrote: 10 blocks for a 49mhz remote? That is pretty unbelievable but I will take your word for it. Ditto on that. I had an old 49 mhz cordless. I had a rooftop antenna used mainly for scanning. Hooked the base of the cordless to the rooftop antenna. Got one of those Larsen handheld antennas, about 3 feet long. Hooked that to the handset on the cordless phone. Got almost 2 blocks. I "had" (before it died) - a cordless phone on 49 MHz. I was able to get like 3 blocks out of it before interference cut into the signal. I found that sort of amazing considering how "cheap" some stuff is made anymore. Only antenna used was the "stock" antennas - handset and base. Now I've got a 2.4 GHz phone - haven't ventured to try it yet. L. |
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