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#1
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What is the value of a Yaesu FTDX-400 with a faulty power supply?
I was listening to amateurs on 40 metres SSB when there was a bang and the whole thing started humming and then the power board CB popped. So something has shorted on the secondary side of the power transformer, but it was receiving just before that happened. I discovered the fuse had been replaced by one way overrated so I'm wondering if the correct one had been blowing. I have not attempted to test the transmitter as I do not have a suitable antenna or dummy load. I'm thinking only enthusiasts would want such an old radio and they would be prepared to fix minor problems. I paid AU$100 for it including a microphone and freight from an online auction not eBay. -- This mind left blank |
#2
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Many In Op radios are salvaged and sold for parts - after a full disassemble - on eBay. The knobs might be worth $20.00 and the face $20.00 and the boards - $20 each..
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No Kings, no queens, no jacks, no long talking washer women... |
#3
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On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 14:29:39 +0100, Channel Jumper
wrote: 'Barry OGrady[_3_ Wrote: ;825089']What is the value of a Yaesu FTDX-400 with a faulty power supply? I was listening to amateurs on 40 metres SSB when there was a bang and the whole thing started humming and then the power board CB popped. So something has shorted on the secondary side of the power transformer, but it was receiving just before that happened. I discovered the fuse had been replaced by one way overrated so I'm wondering if the correct one had been blowing. I have not attempted to test the transmitter as I do not have a suitable antenna or dummy load. I'm thinking only enthusiasts would want such an old radio and they would be prepared to fix minor problems. I paid AU$100 for it including a microphone and freight from an online auction not eBay. -- About as much as a firecracker on the 5th of July! Many In Op radios are salvaged and sold for parts - after a full disassemble - on eBay. The knobs might be worth $20.00 and the face $20.00 and the boards - $20 each.. I can understand you saying that but aren't there enthusiasts who would like to tinker with a 1969 mostly valve transceiver? -- Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you eat his flesh and telepathecally tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree - yep, makes perfect sense. |
#4
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Unless there was some significant value to the radio, or unless it has some historic value, there is nothing to be gained by fixing some old Japanese piece of junk.
By the time you fix it, you have as much in it as you would a good radio that works. Individual components are very expensive today and the days of someone tinkering around with junk are pretty much over. If it was a Collins, or a Heathkit or a Hallicrafters or a Hammurlund - there would probably be a dozen people wanting it, but not Yaesu.. The problem with companies like Yaesu and Kenwood and Icom is that once the radio is unsupported, you can't get the parts to fix it anymore. The Memory chips and boards are almost non existent and you end up with a boat anchor.
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No Kings, no queens, no jacks, no long talking washer women... |
#5
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On Thu, 23 Oct 2014 15:22:05 +0100, Channel Jumper
wrote: Unless there was some significant value to the radio, or unless it has some historic value, there is nothing to be gained by fixing some old Japanese piece of junk. By the time you fix it, you have as much in it as you would a good radio that works. Individual components are very expensive today and the days of someone tinkering around with junk are pretty much over. If it was a Collins, or a Heathkit or a Hallicrafters or a Hammurlund - there would probably be a dozen people wanting it, but not Yaesu.. The problem with companies like Yaesu and Kenwood and Icom is that once the radio is unsupported, you can't get the parts to fix it anymore. The Memory chips and boards are almost non existent and you end up with a boat anchor. Thank you for those thoughts. It was made before the days of memories and chips and has only nine transistors. I take your point about it being Japanese but valve technology still appeals to some people. Being so old there are no really specialised parts in it. -- Channel Jumper -- Why don't fundamentalists push for a revisionist taxonomy that places bats among the birds instead of the mammals? Or to have the schools give equal time to the "demon theory of disease" whenever they discuss the "germ theory of disease"? |
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