[Boatanchors] What is this "Tuning Tool" called??? Another long ramble. . .
howard holden
holden7471 at msn.com
Wed Mar 30 23:53:36 EDT 2016
Can't help you with the name of the tool at the end if your message but a word of warning- the "anti static" tools are mildly conductive. If you happen to be using one to adjust, say, a neutralizing cap you could be in contact with high voltage. From past nasty experience !
Howie WB2AWQ
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 30, 2016, at 8:07 PM, "Phil" <ko6bb1 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi All,
> While I was ordering some things for the Work Bench last week, some of the things I needed and ordered were good old fashioned "tuning tools". It must have been well over 30 years since I last ordered any, the last ones I bought were from RS maybe 20 years ago, and they were JUNK! The plastic shafts were so skinny and soft they'd often twist rather than turn a tight slug. I ended up tossing most of them in the garbage a long time ago. So I was down to just the most basic ones, all being the old red GC stuff. Good tools but well worn.
>
> Any-whooo, I ordered three different sets to be sure I was well covered, two of them GC brand. Sheesh, they cost a lot more than they used to! I the GC P/N 18-530 8 piece CB Alignment Tool Kit (just like the old red GC tools I was so fond of), and also ordered the GC P/N AS-5007 9 piece Anti-Static Alignment Tool Kit. NOT that I think I 'really' need the anti-static tools, but it looked like it had some that I'd want to have. BOTH sets have a nice selection of the "long reach" Hex tools that are so vitally important for tuning BOTH slugs in an IF transformer. The only one I had left was so worn I always had to be very careful NOT to let it slip and break a coil slug. . .
>
> The third set I ordered is "Elenco Brand" 6 piece set. Picture shows 4 pieces, but the description says 6 + pouch, and that's what reviewers say they received. Actually, I ordered this one by accident, it was the first tuning tool set I put in my "cart" and forgot to remove it when I found the two GC sets I really wanted. But I think it just 'might' have some additional really useful tools.
>
> Anyway, if what I ordered lasts as long as the last ones (GC) that I bought I may never have to buy another tuning tool as long as I live.
>
> Actually, my overall FAVORITE tuning tools is one I obtained when I was working at an Electronics assembly plant. They provided us with a very nice tool that had "stepped" hex tool on one end and a small ceramic blade on the other. That ceramic blade is non-metalic and nearly indestructible, good for trimmer caps etc. When I asked if they'd sell me a couple of them for my home use, they gave me a pair. They're made by "Coilcraft" and I have one left, but have NEVER seen one on the market anywhere. Unfortunately the hex end is pretty much rounded off now, but it seemed to outlast the GC brand hex tools.
> ******************************************
>
> OK, now for the 64,000 question. Many, many years ago I had a special tool. If I recall correctly it was plastic and had a brass insert (non-ferric) on one end and a ferric insert on the other end. Useful for determining which way a coil had to be "tweaked" to bring it into resonance. Slip one end and then the other into a coil and see whether the coil needed more or less inductance?
>
> Anybody here remember what that tool was called, or who made it? Of course it'd probably be a fairly simple matter to make one at home with a hollow plastic tube and a brass screw on one end and a ferrite slug on the other. . .
>
>
> --
> 73 From "The Beaconeer's Lair"
> Phil, KO6BB
> http://www.qsl.net/ko6bb/ (Web Page)
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