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A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - Printable Version

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RE: A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - TA Forbes - 08-30-2012

I would advertise here for an output transformer. Also check out Playthings of the Past and John Kendall's site for your part.


RE: A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - DeckApe - 09-08-2012

It lives.



I'll work on the alignment later, after I inspect my signal generator; so far it would seem that the best thing to do would be to move the dial pointer about a half-inch on the string as that will bring the world into dial scale alignment. I may not even screw with it after that. Icon_smile

THANK YOU to all of you who walked me through my first radio!


RE: A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - DeckApe - 10-07-2012

Upon listening closely to my radio, it has a very low-volume but consistent 60 Hz (B-flat) hum coming out of the speaker, even with the volume all the way down. Is this normal, or indicative of needing the voice coil wires reversed?


RE: A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - jerryhawthorne - 10-08-2012

Deckape, is the hum level changed at all by increasing the volume? If not, perhaps a little cathode to filament leak on one of the tubes in the audio output. The voice coil, a possibility if the wires were switched. If it has a hum bucking coil tied to the voice coil and things are turned around, it won't cut some of the induced hum from the field coil they have to be in opposition. Just my lame ideas. Congrats on getting this far!
Jerry


RE: A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - codefox1 - 10-08-2012

Agree, if the hum bucker winding is wired backwards you will get more not less hum. Can't hurt to reverse it and have a listen. All those old sets had some hum regardless. You can beef up the filter capacitors a little bit (say 10%) and as said, make sure your output tubes are not gassy, but there will still be a little hum or more likely interference from modern devices that simply didn't exist way back when.


RE: A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - TA Forbes - 10-08-2012

Rectifiers will also cause a set to hum when they get weak....


RE: A Beginner's Journey: The Philco 40-190 - DeckApe - 10-08-2012

I all but let the smoke out of the original rectifier by crossing a couple of wires in the rebuild--thankfully, I had a spare hanging about (And a Raytheon-branded tube, at that). The spare tested out stronger even to start with. I'll try swapping the wires out when I'm feeling adventurous (and have a few spare moments to devote to the pursuit). I guess I'm asking a bit of a useless question in wanting quantification when I'm the only one available to listen to the speaker. Icon_biggrin

All else fails, I'll swap the wires back.