The Rochester Amateur Radio Association

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Rochester Amateur Radio Association

By Kevin Carey, WB2QMY

Receiver photos courtesy of Universal Radio, Inc.

www.dxing.com

1

What We ’ ’ ll Cover

Communications Receivers of the 1945-1980 era

1.6 to 30 MHz frequency range

Primarily tube-types, Made in USA

Reasons for the current interest

Locating a vintage rig

Simple repairs & restoration tips

Soup-ups for your classic rig

2

Who owns or uses a rig older than:

1980, 1960, 1940, 1930?

3

What ’ ’ s Old is New Again

Vintage rigs don’t “age-out” like other electronics

Early rigs had “attitude”

Today’s radios can leave us unfulfilled

Relive earlier times (first station, more innocent world, etc.)

Newer listeners want to know what it was like, and also save $$.

Challenge—they don’t always work right away

(tubes, calibration, capacitors, etc.)

4

Who ’ ’ d Have Thought?

Not quite a swimsuit calendar, but …

5

Do your research! (dxing.com, rigpix.com, eham.net, Google, specialty books on your make)

Word of mouth (radio clubs, friends, on the air)

Swap meets & Hamfests

Good deals to be had, often a large selection

Ask if sellers have any vintage gear they didn’t bring

“hands-on” environment

Negotiation almost expected! (Is manual present?, any deficiencies noted, is it getting late in the day?)

Last resort—leave a card with seller

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QST—Specific listings for

Antique/Vintage/Classic gear www.arrl.org

Classified “Radios On-Line” section (Antique/Vintage, and Receivers)

AWA Journal (formerly Old Timer’s Bulletin)

Electric Radio Magazine

Antique Radio Classified

8

Must-h aves for the Serious

9

The “ “ Bluebook ” ” of Vintage Receivers

10

Find your treasure @ www.ebay.com

Nemesis to hamfests, or a boon to collectors?

Has driven prices higher in many cases

Huge volume of vintage gear now sold this way!

Worldwide market for both buyers & sellers

Give it a try…registration is free, easy

Reasonably safe medium (Feedback scores, verified identities).

Walk-in services in some cities—They’ll can do the work for you!

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Search tool—just enter keyword(s) for the item(s) you’re looking for

You can converse with sellers via e-mail

Place a maximum bid for an item, and the system bids on your behalf, as necessary.

Convenient payment options (credit card via

PayPal, check, money order)

Study the tutorials, become a “pro” user!

12

A “ “ Model ” ” eBay Auction

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max . bid here

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Auctions designed to get the highest possible price for an item. Don’t expect “super” deals unless there is low demand for an item.

Shipping costs & concerns: Will they pack it right?, must you be home for delivery?

Is a picture really worth a thousand words?

(performance issues, cigarette stench, paint finish)

You must ask questions to be sure! If not satisfied with answers, don’t bid.

There are other fish in the sea!

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Decide the maximum you’re willing to pay, and bid that amount (Remember shipping costs—boatanchors can be heavy!)

“Reserve not met” message

“Buy Now” option—If you positively must have that radio! Removes competition.

An odd bid may help due to bid increments

(i.e., $153.57 instead of $150.00)

How long is the auction? Early activity often drives the price up.

“Watch” the auction to track its status

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Strategies

(Cont ’ ’ d)

Check feedback score of seller. How many sales, how many negative, pos. & neutral?

Always pay promptly—simply click “Pay

Now” button when you win

Leave prompt, honest feedback

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Military/industrial surplus (Fair Radio

Sales, Toronto Surplus, etc.)

Radio Recyclers, RadioFinder

Usually not the cheapest way to go, but items are fairly represented

May include a limited warranty

Don’t rule out “parts” sets, even before you find your dream rig.

22

It ’ ’ s on Your Bench

Visual checks—No power yet!

Gathering information on your set

SAFETY!

First power-up

“On-the-air” evaluation

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Don’t just do something, stand there!

Learn all you can about the set (manuals, reviews, service records, web searches, etc.)

Do the controls move freely?

Debris inside? signs of previous troubles?

(charring, electrical smell?)

How’s the line cord look?

Is the set properly fused? (if not, why not?)

24

Check wiring (inside and out). Insulation may be brittle, disintegrated.

“Hot Chassis” concern with AC/DC sets—Test with a VOM against ground.

High voltages present—300V or more possible.

“One-handed” technique.

Beware of hot tubes, sharp metal!

See www.stanwatkins.com/safety.htm

for more safety tips

25

Use a variable transformer (“Variac”) to bring the power up slowly, look for excessive current draw.

Look, listen, smell for problems.

Variac seen at RARA Auction, just $10!

26

First Power-Up

(Cont ’ ’ d)

Document all problems you find

Are all tubes/pilot lights lit?

Noise from speaker?

Try tuning in a few local broadcast stations. How close is the dial calibration?

“Scratchy” controls/switches?

“S” meter working?

Try other bands (WWV, CHU signals)

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Decide level of restoration you want to do

Should it be left original, or restored to showroom condition?

Is it damage, or “honest wear”

Consider a “phased” approach (safe, operational, then cosmetic

Do it yourself, or professional service?

Do you have the necessary tools?

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The Restorer ’ ’ s Toolkit

Variac (or series light bulb tester)

Tuner cleaner (DeoxIT by Caig Laboratories)

Canned air

Tube Tester (Eico, Hickok, Federal)

VOM/VTVM

Scope is nice, but not essential

Assorted handtools (small screwdrivers, nutdrivers, needle-nose pliers, etc.)

Manuals, Parts Catalogs

Capacitor Tester (Eico 955, or equiv.)

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The Restorer ’ ’ s Toolkit

(Cont ’ ’ d)

RF/AF Generator (Eico, Hickok, HP, McMurdo

Silver, etc.)

Alignment tools (non-metallic)

Toothbrush

Soft brushes for cleaning dials, chassis, etc.

Mini attachments for vacuum cleaners (available at discount stores)

Soldering/de-soldering equipment

“Test speaker” with clip leads

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The Restorer ’ ’ s Toolkit

(Cont ’ ’ d)

Needle-tip lubricator (RS# 64-2301A)

Test antenna (10-15 foot wire w/alligator clip)

Alligator test clips

Component Freeze Spray

Tubes

Fuses

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Scratchy controls/switches

Shot of contact cleaner may help (spray in openings, or along shaft)

If too far worn, replace it

AC Hum

Common problem in older receivers

Usually caused by disintegrated filter capacitors in p.s.

Test by jumping a known-good unit across existing cap

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Paper/wax capacitor failures

A notorious problem in older RXs

Can cause distortion, intermittents, and “motorboating”

Happens when capacitor materials dry out, disintegrates

Modern (sealed plastic) replacements are available-often sold as “kits” for a particular set.

Purists often “re-cap” an entire set as standard policy

Modern capacitors can sometimes be “hidden” inside vintage component casings—tough work though.

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Tubes

Often an overblown problem—most types still avail.

Substitution guides can be helpful

Solid state replacements available for some tubes

Make a location chart before removing or cleaning tubes

Tip: Worn lettering may become readable by cooling tube in freezer, then breathing on it.

Clean tube sockets with contact cleaner, rock tube

Tube Testers often seen at hamfests ($35-$100).

(Hickok model 6000 said to be best for vintage radio work. Federal TV-2A also excellent.)

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Speaker Tears

Easily repaired w/ tissue paper and glue

There are also speaker rebuilding services

Dial Cord Replacement/Service

Get a dial cord diagram, or make one before touching cord. Dial cord books sometimes found at hamfests

Long tweezers (hemostat type) useful for stringing dial cord around pulleys, shafts, etc.

Many sizes & types of cord available through vintage radio dealers

Slipping cord can be fixed by removing spring at pulley

& twisting a few turns. Musician’s Rosin also helpful.

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Shorting Tuning Capacitor Plates

Symptoms include audible rubbing, signal drop-out

Use ohm meter to determine trouble area

Outer plates most susceptible to damage

Straighten plates gently with fingernail or jeweler’s screwdriver

Line Cords

AES, others offer many types of replacement cords & plugs

Consider using a plug with fuse holders built in

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Receiver Alignment

Not always necessary—check performance

Do not attempt alignment without manual.

Often very complex (hi/lo end of scale, etc.)

Observe all pre-settings and warm-up times

Stripped coil form threads? String wrapped around slug may fix it, or small rubber band alongside threads.

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Cosmetic Attention

Proceed at your own risk! Every case is unique.

Use mild cleaners only—test in a hidden spot

Front panel, knobs can be removed for cleaning

Non-ammonia Windex , Murphy Oil Soap often used, along with very soft cloth, or brush

Dishwasher technique for front panels (use caution)

Toothbrush or Q-tip may help in hard-to-reach areas

NEVER wash dial scales! Use very soft brush to clean dust off—nothing more—printing may be erased!

Canned air/vacuum tools

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Cosmetic Attention

(Cont’d)

Touch-up paints available for many models. Can be applied with a toothpick for minor chips. (Make sure surface is horizontal)

Replacement front panels & dial glass available for some models

Novus #1, #2 for plastic knobs and some trim

Old English scratch cover (for wood cabinets)

Pledge furniture polish brings out luster on front panels, cabinets, crinkle finishes

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Have reasonable expectations.

“Sunday Drive” philosophy

In 1955, there were: less crowded bands, fewer interference sources, fewer modes to deal with

Some higher end units can still hold their own today (Collins, National, the 3 H’s)

Most will have better audio…all will help warm your shack!

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Avoid physical modification of your rig. No drilling!

Many external items available to improve performance

Audio Filter—for peaking desired signals & notching heterodynes. (MFJ 751B, 722 good choices, others available)

Crystal Calibrator—Easily homebrewed, simple design online at: www.rason.org/Projects/calibrat.htm

External Digital Frequency Readout—Simple connection to VFO, direct reading. Check offerings by

“Almost All Digital Electronics”

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Soup-Ups

(Cont ’ ’ d)

High-Pass Filters to eliminate BCB QRM

Check offerings by Par Electronics, others

Preselectors, Preamplifiers

May boost sluggish performance, esp. on higher frequencies (above 20 MHz)

Check offerings by MFJ, others

Audio Matching Transformers

Helps match 600-ohm output impedance on older rigs to common 8-ohm impedance for today’s speakers.

RS #32-1031B “Line Transformer” a good choice.

Greatly improves audio quality on R-390/A

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We Have Local Resources!

Antique Wireless Association (AWA)

Glenwood Sales (RARA Advertiser)

Goldcrest Electronics (Rochester)

Radio Daze (Victor)

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Books

The ARRL Handbook

Preferably from an era matching your receiver. Commonly available at hamfests, swapmeets, eBay

Available new from American Radio Relay League, 225 Main St., Newington, CT 06111 or online at: www.arrl.org

.

Modern Radio Servicing by Alfred A. Ghirardi, 1935 and later editions. May be available online from

ABE books ( www.abebooks.com

) or similar vintage booksellers.

Receiver Troubleshooting and Repair , Alfred A. Ghirardi, sixth printing 1955. May be available online from ABE books ( www.abebooks.com

) or similar vintage booksellers.

Shortwave Receivers Past and Present , Fred Osterman, Universal Radio Research, 6830 Americana

Parkway, Reynoldsburg, OH 43068. www.universal-radio.com

Antique Radios, Restoration and Price Guide , David and Betty Johnson, 1982, Wallace-Homestead

Book Company, 201 King of Prussia Road, Radnor, PA 19089. May also be available online from ABE books ( www.abebooks.com

) or similar vintage booksellers.

Ham Equipment Price Guide, Dave Goodman, KG6JTB. 1219 W. Saint George Dr., San Dimas, CA

91773 www.kg6jtb.freewebspace.com

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Books

(Cont’d)

How to Repair Old-Time Radios , Clayton Hallmark, Tab Books, Blue Ridge Summit, PA

ISBN 0-8306-7342-3. May also be available online from ABE books ( www.abebooks.com

) or similar vintage booksellers.

Elements of Radio , Abraham Marcus and William Marcus, 1948 & later editions, Prentice-Hall, Inc.

May be available online from ABE books ( www.abebooks.com

) or similar vintage booksellers.

The Zenith Trans-Oceanic—The Royalty of Radios , 1995, By John Bryant and Harold Cones,

Schiffer Publishing, 4880 Lower Valley Rd., Atglen, PA 19310 www.schifferbooks.com

Equipment Manuals

W7FG Vintage Manuals (highly recommended source) 402731 West 2155 Drive, Bartlesville,

Oklahoma 74006. Tel. 918-333-3754, Order Line: 800-807-6146 www.w7fg.com/ (Owned by local ham, Jeff Ach, W2FU)

The Boat Anchor Manual Archive (BAMA), Online manuals that may be downloaded electronically, huge selection. http://bama.sbc.edu/

1105, Tel. 419-227-6573. www.fairradio.com

Equipment Manuals

(Cont’d)

The Manual Man, 27 Walling St., Sayreville, NJ 08872-1818, Tel. 908-238-8964

Cardwell Condenser Corporation (Hammarlund manuals) 80 East Montauk Highway,

Lindenhurst, NY11757. Tel. 516-957-7200

Surplus Sales of Nebraska (primarily Collins manuals), 1218 Nicholas Street, Omaha, NE

68102-4221. Tel. 402-346-4750, 800-244-4567

Howard W. Sams & Company, P.O. Box 7092, Indianapolis, IN 46207-7092. Tel. 800-428-

SAMS

A.G. Tannenbaum, P.O. Box 386, Ambler, PA 19002. Tel. 215-657-0106.

www.agtannenbaum.com

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Tubes, Parts & Restoration Supplies

Antique Electronic Supply, 6221 South Maple Ave., Tempe, AZ 85283. Tel. 602-820-5411 www.tubesandmore.com

(Highly recommended resource—everything for the vintage radio enthusiast)

Webtubes.com (online resource for early radio books and related publications) www.webtubes.com

Play Things of Past, catalog requests to: Gary B. Schneider, 9511 Sunrise Blvd., #J23,

Cleveland, OH 44133. Tel. 216-582-3904 (large selection of vintage parts)

Electron Tube Enterprises, 11 Linden Ln, Box 8311, Essex, VT 05451. Tel. 802-879-7764

Almost All Digital Electronics, 1412 Elm St., S.E. Auburn, WA 98092. Tel. 253-351-9316

(Digital Frequency Readouts for vintage receivers) www.aade.com

Radio Adventures Company, RD 4 Box 240, Franklin, PA 16323 Tel. 814-437-5355 (Digital

Frequency Readouts for vintage receivers, other items of interest to hams)

R & R Designs Classic Radio Paints, 202 Midvale Drive Marshall, WI 53559 Tel. 1-608-655-

4857 (Touch-up paint for vintage gear, Hammarlund clocks, HQ-129X front panels, various other parts & radio connectors)

Frontier Capacitor, P.O. Box 218, 403 S. McIntosh St., Lehr, North Dakota 58460

Tel. 701-378-2341

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Tubes, Parts & Restoration Supplies

(Cont’d)

Surplus Sales of Nebraska, 1502 Jones St., Omaha, NE 68102 Tel. 402-346-4750 www.surplussales.com

George H. Fathauer & Assoc., LLC, Early Radio & Collector Tubes, 688 W. First St., Suite 4,

Tempe, AZ 85281 e-mail: fathauer@home.com

Fair Radio Sales, 2395 St. Johns Rd., P.O. Box 1105, Lima, OH 45802-1105, Tel. 419-227-

6573. www.fairradio.com

W.J. Ford Surplus, 4 Wellington St., P.O. Box 606, Smith Falls, ON K7A 4T6 Canada

Tel. 613-283-5195 www.testequipmentcanada.com

Radio Daze Vintage Radio & Electronics, 7620 Omnitech Place, Victor, NY 14564

(Showroom near Rochester, NY, as well as online ordering. Impressive, growing selection of, parts, tubes & restoration supplies)

MFJ Enterprises, 300 Industrial Park Road, Starkville, MS 39759 Tel. 662-323-5869 www.mfjenterprises.com

(Receiving accessories, other ham/SWL items)

Universal Radio, Inc., 6830 Americana Parkway, Reynoldsburg, OH 43068.

www.universal-radio.com

(Interesting selection of books on radio history & collecting)

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Tubes, Parts & Restoration Supplies

(Cont’d)

Just Radios, Dave & Babylyn Cantelon, 42 Clematis Road, North York, ON Canada M2J 4X2 www.justradios.com

(capacitor kits for tube radios)

Toronto Surplus and Scientific www.torontosurplus.com

Museums

Antique Wireless Assn. Museum , 2 South Avenue, Bloomfield, NY 14469 www.antiquewireless.org

(Website has selections from the AWA Journal , classified ads, business card ads, photo tour of the museum, excellent links on radio history, AWA membership info, and much more—a must visit!)

Museum of Radio & Technology, Inc ., 1640 Florence Ave., Huntington, WV 25701 http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~postr/MRT/index.htm

Hammond Museum of Radio , Hammond Mfg., 595 Southgate Drive, Guelph, ON Canada

(Excellent representation of communications gear, Founded by Fred Hammond, VE3HC www.kwarc.on.ca/hammond

New England Wireless and Steam Museum , 1300 Frenchtown Road, East Greenwich, RI

02818 USA Telephone: 401-885-0545 http://users.ids.net/~newsm/

John Dilks’ (K2TQN) Mobile Radio Museum . Museum information online at: www.eht.com/oldradio/museum/

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Periodicals

AWA Journal , Available with membership in the AWA, Dues: $20/yr., P.O. Box 421,

Bloomfield, New York 14469 www.antiquewireless.org

Electric Radio , P.O. Box 242, Bailey, CO 80421-0242 Tel. 720-942-0171 $1 for sample copy. er@frontier.net

Antique Radio Classified , P.O. Box 802-N14, Carlisle, MA 01741 $39.49/yr. (6-month trial

$19.95 www.antiqueradio.com

Monitoring Times Magazine , (Radio Restorations column) 7540 Highway 64 West,

Brasstown, NC 28902-0098 Tel. 828-837-2216 www.monitoringtimes.com

QST Magazine , (Old Radio column), American Radio Relay League, 225 Main St.,

Newington, CT 06111. QST available with ARRL Membership, Dues: $39/yr. www.arrl.org

Internet & Online Resources

Sci.electronics.repair FAQ —Huge collection of tips for troubleshooting electronic gear www.repairfaq.org

Boatanchor FAQ— Nice collection of writings on getting started, where to find parts, etc.

www.virhistory.com/ham/rrab.faq.htm

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Internet & Online Resources

(Cont’d)

Boatanchors News Group— Discussion group for vintage ham/swl gear.

Rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors

National Radio Restoration Hints www.io.com/~nielw/Hint.htm

The Heathkit Shop— Information & parts for Heathkit restoration www.theheathkitshop.com

RTO Electronics— Heath restoration and repair service www.rtoham.com

Total Electronics— Heath Repair, Plus Paint & Silkscreen services for many models www.angelfire.com/nc/totalelectronics

Martek Radio, LLC —Vintage amateur and shortwave radio repair & alignment. 240 Hiram

Allen Rd., Blythewood, SC 29016 Tel. 803-786-4607 e-mail: w7do@msn.com

Miltronix— Repair & restoration of R-390 series receivers and some other “R” series receivers. Rick Mish, 36 E. Manhatten Blvd., Toledo, OH 43608 Tel. 419-255-6220 www.dxing.com/r390/mish.htm

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Internet & Online Resources

(Cont’d)

Glen Zook— Collins, Heath & other repairs/restorations/parts http://home.comcast.net/~zcomco/

Boatanchor Classifieds www.dealamerica.com/deal/cgi-bin/ads/bcads.cgi

Bry’s Price Guide —Survey of asking prices for vintage/classic radios www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hall/8701/ham/boneyard.htm

John Kendall’s Vintage Electronics —Online selection of swl/ham/broadcast gear www.king-cart.com/cgi-bin/

My Vintage Radios— Equipment repair & restoration service, silkscreening www.myvintageradios.com

The Hammarlund Historian— History of the Hammarlund Co., information resources and pictures www.hammarlund.info/

W.J Ford Surplus Enterprises—Receivers, transmitters, test gear, components www.testequipmentcanada.com/

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Internet & Online Resources

(Cont’d)

DXing.com— Excellent resource pages with pictures and specs of many models www.dxing.com/rx/tindex.htm

Boatanchor Pix—Photos and information about many vintage models http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~postr/bapix/

E-ham.com— Wide-ranging discussion board with an area for vintage/classic gear. User’s opinions, quirks of certain models, tips www.eham.com

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What We ’ ’ ve Covered …

Boatanchors are fun to work on and use !

Where to find them, including eBay

Initial checkout, safety

Tools you’ll need

Common problems & restoration tips

Add-ons for boosting performance

References where you can learn more

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Thanks for attending!

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Other Questions: wb2qmy@arrl.net

OR:

Kevincarey@monitoringtimes.com

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