[Milsurplus] mystery diode solved! The PRC-74 saga

Ray Fantini RAFANTINI at salisbury.edu
Fri Sep 19 09:18:33 EDT 2025


Never saw anything like this before. The meter works but reads low on current. If I run five mA thru it the meter pegs, but below one mA nothing at all. The discriminator on the 74  puts out maybe one mA max but with that  input see nothing at all on the meter. Using an external VOM set to the 2.5 mA scale (PSM-37) see plenty of deflection and action below one mA and going a step further and jumping in an external zero to one mA meter that works just like it should. But the internal meter on the radio dose nothing?
The meter on the PRC-74 is just about 5/8 of an inch in width and maybe a inch and a half deep and of course its sealed. Have found a replacement on line but its crazy expensive. This is not my radio but one that I am working on for someone else, if it were my radio would be tempted to mount the zero to one mA meter that I have been using it with on the bench in a little box and attach it to the radios case being its easy to see unlike the meter that's on the radio but being its not my radio want to try to keep it original and right. Another thought would be to build a small one transistor current amplifier to drive the "weird" acting meter at a high current. Can do that with a 2N222 and a resistor or two but that's not fixing the problem and have to wonder if the meter would change or become worse over time. Still also perplexed by why low currents don't do anything at all on the original meter? But I have also seen these meters get wonkey before where you sometimes have to smack the radio to get them moving again.


Ray F/KA3EKH


From: milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net <milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net> On Behalf Of Brooke via Milsurplus
Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2025 8:16 PM
To: milsurplus at mailman.qth.net
Subject: [Milsurplus] mystery diode solved! I was the problem


Hi Ray:

Can you use external test equipment (batteries and resistors) to check the meter in the radio?

If it moves, but in a strange way there might be a tiny bit of ferrous metal inside.  A stereo microscope is handy for a close look.


--

Have Fun,



Brooke Clarke

https://www.PRC68.com<https://www.prc68.com/>

axioms:

1. The extent to which you can fix or improve something will be limited by how well you understand how it works.

2. Everybody, with no exceptions, holds false beliefs.
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