Welcome to Australia's only Vintage Radio and Television discussion forums. You are not logged in. Please log in below, apply for an account or retrieve your password.
Australian Vintage Radio Forums
  Home  ·  About Us  ·  Discussion Forums  ·  Glossary  ·  Outside Links  ·  Policies  ·  Services Directory  ·  Safety Warnings  ·  Tutorials

General Discussion

Forum home - Go back to General discussion

 HMV Radiogram
« Back · 1 · 2 · Next »
 Return to top of page · Post #: 16 · Written at 8:02:52 AM on 2 January 2017.
STC830's Gravatar
 Location: NSW
 Member since 10 June 2010
 Member #: 681
 Postcount: 1256

A good article on replacing selenium with silicon rectifiers.

http://w3hwj.com/index_files/RBSelenium2.pdf


 
 Return to top of page · Post #: 17 · Written at 10:00:00 AM on 2 January 2017.
Flakes's avatar
 Location: Adelaide, SA
 Member since 27 February 2010
 Member #: 630
 Postcount: 392

Good read.

I have a few of these in the Philips (Mullard etc) Tin portables.

There is even one in my University Super tester (TST).

I do plan to change them out but I dont use the Tin Portables and the TST will need a calibration after replacement.


‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾
Valve radios, They just don't make them like they used to

 
 Return to top of page · Post #: 18 · Written at 12:27:21 PM on 2 January 2017.
JamieLee's Gravatar
 Location: Clare, SA
 Member since 27 March 2016
 Member #: 1894
 Postcount: 510

I have made a little gadget for powering up sets, it's just a block of wood with a standard bayonet light fitting, placed in series with the 'active' lead in a small extension cord. If I'm itching to see if something works from scratch, I first place a 40w incandescent bulb in the socket and plug the radio etc into the extension cord and the extension cord into the power point. I then turn on the radio and if the bulb lights up brightly, I know that the radio has a short and go from there. If it only lights up half brightly, I replace the 40w bulb with a 60 or 100w, If I only get a dim glow, I try and tune into stations and usually find them. If the lamp lights up, I shut power off immediately as there is obviously a major problem!
I have never had any issues using this little gadget as 40w of power is all thet 40w globe will let pass through the circuit and should do no harm in a few seconds, long enough to shut off power!


 
 Return to top of page · Post #: 19 · Written at 2:01:07 PM on 2 January 2017.
Ian Robertson's Gravatar
 Location: Belrose, NSW
 Member since 31 December 2015
 Member #: 1844
 Postcount: 2372

Yes JamieLee, that is a very wise solution.

Major benefit is that a tungsten filament lamp happens to be a PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) resistor. The more current you try to draw through it, the more it will heat up and reduce the current, so protecting things from damage. But if things are working normally, the lamp will drop little voltage and effectively "get out of the way" unless a fault develops. Choose the wattage to be about double the normal power rating of the load you are trying to protect.

For first power-up of large chassis like TVs I use a fan heater in series with the mains, lowest power setting first. Saves any drama.

A colleague of mine who used to have to repair KC series Blaupunkt colour TVs would refer to the power-on-after-repair process as "flash-up" - because that was often literally what happened! I HATED those TVs for that reason! Shudder! You could power them up on the isolation transformer as often as you liked and all would be well as the transformer limited the current on the first half-cycle. Direct connection to mains, power on a few times and BANG! Scare the living daylights out of you! Replace the fuses, bridge diodes, SCR and related parts and try again.


 
« Back · 1 · 2 · Next »
 You need to be a member to post comments on this forum.

Sign In

Username:
Password:
 Keep me logged in.
Do not tick box on a computer with public access.