[ARC5] 10 meter BC-454 - more
brianclarke01 at optusnet.com.au
brianclarke01 at optusnet.com.au
Thu Feb 14 16:08:08 EST 2013
Hang in there, Ken,
I think you're doing a grand job. I'm really looking forward to your
end solution.
73 de Brian, VK2GCE.
----- Original Message -----
From:kgordon2006 at frontier.com
To:"Arc5 mail list"
Cc:
Sent:Thu, 14 Feb 2013 10:10:25 -0800
Subject:[ARC5] 10 meter BC-454 - more
Over the past few days, I have "solidified" the coils and their
included slugs.
I also did some careful adjustment (using my Millen GDO), and
rewinding of
the RF amp plate/mixer grid coils (L2/L3) by 1) eliminating the 9 turn
interwound RF plate coil (L2), and winding a 14 turn (from the
original ARC
documentation) separate coil above the mixer grid coil (L3),
positioning it
identically to the original coil, and 2) adjusting the spacing of L3
to tune it
with the C4D and C4F "centered" (1/2 open) to 28 MHz.
Result of solidifying the coils was to reduce, but not eliminate, the
ringing,
but it did eliminate the "jumping" of frequency. The jumping was
obviously
caused by the loose slugs.
Result of reworking L2/L3 was a vast increase in the gain through the
system. Obviously, the original ARC method of coupling L2/L3 is far
more
effective than the CQ-magazine-suggested method.
Interwinding L2 with L3 was suggested by the original article which
stated
that doing so would increase RF gain. Instead, this seemed to cause L3
to
tune VERY low, and instead vastly REDUCED the gain. I suspect that the
very close mutual coupling had something to do with this, and that the
reduced gain was caused by inability to tune the mixer grid coil to
the proper
frequency.
I have about exhausted every normal reason for the ringing, except
two: 1)
the tuning capacitor (which I am almost convinced there is nothing
further I
can do about), and 2) the bypass capacitors I used to replace the
can-caps
around the mixer stage.
I used some small high-quality rectangular-shaped dark-orange-colored
.047
MFD 400 VDC caps to replace all the shot can-caps, and mounted them
right at the tube sockets as stiffly as I could. However, the mixer
stage, which
also contains the HFO, appears to be very sensitive to movement of any
component associated with it.
Therefore, I plan to "solidify" every possible bit in that area with
some of
Mike's coil dope.
At this point, I am almost convinced that the ringing problem is
centered in
the tuning capacitor. One clue is that even very slight movement or
touching
of the front-panel, or the box that covers the tuning cap, or the
tuning knob,
or the coax that connects to the antenna connector results in
significant
frequency shift.
Some of this, of course, can be put down to the 10X increase in the
HFO
frequency, but not all either. Techniques that work well at 3 MHz,
don't
always work as well at 30 MHz.
BTW, the original ARC documentation concerning circuit values
(capacitance
and inductance, and turns on the coils) provided by one or two of our
members here, are almost exactly what I am now using. I will re-post
those
details when I have finally run out of patience with this....thing....
Kenneth G. Gordon W7EKB
"Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway."--- John
Wayne
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