One modification to the BC-453 that I'd highly recommend...
The tapped antenna input coil is a problem; in many situations it allows unwanted ground loops
that greatly increase noise sneaking in from the AC power line.
On one set I had, I pulled out the antenna coil and disconnected the tap. I then replaced it with a
link coil of maybe 20 turns wound over the coil. The plug in terminals can be configured to allow
the new link coil to be connected to the antenna input.
The noise level went down dramatically, and after some realignment the set became a first class
NDB hunter.
Mr. T.
-----Original Message-----
From: Dennis Monticelli <dennis.monticelli@gmail.com>
Sent: Nov 19, 2025 3:15 PM
To: Mark K3MSB <mark.k3msb@gmail.com>
Cc: ARC5 <arc5@mailman.qth.net>, Military Radio Collectors Association (mrca@mailman.qth.net) <mrca@mailman.qth.net>, List Milsurplus <milsurplus@mailman.qth.net>
Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] [ARC5] Vintage LF/MF Fun with my BC-453B
Mark,
That is a fun thing to do. 10 yrs ago I did the same thing with a rebuilt BC-453B. One tip I will pass along is to use batteries if you can, especially the B+. I ran eight 9V batteries for B+. Divorcing the receiver from the AC line reduces noise pickup from all the crud that modern electronics dump into the line. It was a significant difference in my situation. Also if you haven't already, adjust the IF transformers for looser coupling by pulling up on the tabs. This will reduce the noise BW.
Dennis AE6C