[Johnson] VFO Removal
Ed Tanton
[email protected]
Tue, 29 Apr 2003 23:17:07 -0400
There is a MUCH better procedure: go in the side and SHORT the resistor
with a wire. Trace the wire (connected to the now-shorted resistor) and
plan to remove that wire from that connection. There is a spare lug nearby
that you can use, depending mostly on how you want to mount your NEW, 5 or
10W resistor. One end of it connects to the terminal (from which you
removed the wire-think of it as your VFO voltage source), and the other end
connects to the (removed) wire (that goes into the VFO compartment-think of
the VFO compartment as the destination.) Voila!! The heat from the resistor
is now OUTSIDE the VFO compartment, and that deadly VFO resistor is no
longer a threat. (There are stories about the results of that very
failure-prone component-such as a MELTED [!!!] 0A2... etc. etc.)
Something I am about to apply (since I am forced to go into my Ranger II
due to the bandswitch cam-block slipping) is a pair of 5W 50V Zeners in
series at the point that the wire (going back into the VFO compartment)
connects to the 'dropping' resistor. This SHOULD regulate the VFO at
100V without the regulator tube ever firing. I may have to adjust this
with some combination of 5W zeners. The plan is for the regulator tube to
be effectively bypassed, and therefore not be there at all,
heat-wise/failure-wise. That way I shouldn't have to actually go into the
VFO compartment to implement this plan-saving all these hassles you're
reading about. I'm not very good mechanically, and getting into the VFO
compartment was a real bitch for me-for a while. Take your time, and note
the nuts on the bottom you'll have to remove-and, as I recall-the
bandswitch cam shaft. If you DO have to remove the shaft & cam: use a
permanent Sharpie MARKER to place indexing marks on both the cam-block and
the shaft (on BOTH sides of the cam-block and shaft)-and be careful not to
rub them off!
In YOUR case, since you MUST go into the VFO compartment, you can just
remove the VR tube, and add 105V (I think it is) of 5W zeners somewhere on
the destination-side of the new resistor, to ground. One 4 or 5 terminal
terminal strip mounted somewhere there's enough of a screw to mount it to
would solve our mounting problems. I'll probably have to do the same thing.
I MIGHT just fasten the zener 'string' well mechanically, solder them, and
cover them with black shrink tubing. (That last point being what you have
to do for insulation if you don't mount the extra terminal strip.)
P.S. I plan to TRY and drill shallow holes (for the set screws) into the
cam shaft-so this darn shaft/cam 'connection' won't come loose again
(combined with some 'locknut').
73 Ed Tanton N4XY <[email protected]>
Ed Tanton N4XY
189 Pioneer Trail
Marietta, GA 30068-3466
website: http://www.n4xy.com
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