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#1
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About three years ago, I completely restored a Heathkit HW-101 because
I was fascinated with 70's vintage SSB radios and that model seemed the most approachable. I has lots of fun over the many hours I spent with it, crafting techniques for doing the work, coming up with low-impact mods for improving performance, and especially lighting it up the first time and only having one little soldering issue before the HF bands roared in. Here is a sample of some of the things I did, just for the fun of it: - one by one, I removed each PCB and cleaned it in a concoction that removed dust and wax. Sensitive components (coils,etc) were removed prior to the wash - replaced EVERY SINGLE RESISTOR, and all polarized capacitors - I moved the crystals on the sideband selection circuit to the other side of the PCB (got away from hot tube!) and added capacitors to tweak them back to the right frequency - modulator diodes replaced with 4-way matched HP diodes - Especially crazy, I replaced the filters with INRAD filters. So, I finished it off, tested it, and put it on the shelf. I really don't operate much, and even then, prefer to use my Ten-Tec. It is sitting around doing nothing. I have had a similar thing happen with a H.H. Scott amplifier I restored. THAT one was really my masterpiece. After keeping it in my living room for a while, I sold it on eBay. Now, the thing with the HW-101 (and the H.H. Scott) is that they really don't sell for much. So, when I got about $150 for the amplifier, I wasn't surprised. What I was COMPLETELY surprised by was a letter I got weeks later from the buyer. To paraphrase, he loved the amplifier and felt the quality for the restoration was hardly justified by the money he paid for it, so he included a check for $150 more! The additional money wasn't as great as the token of appreciation. I honestly got alot more out of that note than the $150. It was awesome and rare to get such a thing. I'm am exchanging a radio for something with low value but still rare and awesome. What could this be? Examples of Stuff Accepted: A video of you playing a face-melting guitar solo A spectacular lump of coal A battery from the 1800's Artwork of thine own hand Some surplus thing that just looks awesome Unusual clocks Polished wood An enormous nut - I mean freaking huge! Backflips A bottle of crude oil Examples of Stuff Not Accepted: Money (except if it is a really cool banknote) Swaps for any common electronic equipment Nothing Meat Products Of course, you'll want proof of the existence of this radio. In about a week I shall upload some videos of this to YouTube and add links to this post. This ad will be open for 3 weeks and the best suggestion will be chosen. Good luck! |
#2
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Changed all resistors, uprated many of them. Applied Heathkit change
orders and notes. Changed temperature compensation capacitor. David Goncalves How did you fix the drift. * I love these radios but the drift is nasty in almost all of them. The VFOs output frequency drifts "up" for an hour |
#3
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