Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Modified 38-12 to what purpose?
#1

I'm working on a 38-12 that has two modifications, one of which I don't understand.

Visit      http://www.nostalgiaair.org/Resources/236/M0013236.htm    for the schematics.

The modification I'm seeing is coming off the center terminal of the volume control. It consists of a 50pF mica in parallel with a 400kohm resistor which then connects to the .01 mfd cap that is shown on the schematic. After changing the filter caps and removing the modification in power supply, I turned the radio on. It works about as well as you would expect for leaky caps and many way out of tolerance resistors. I tuned in a station and listened to it then bypassed the modification. As far as I could tell, there was no difference between the two.

Does anyone have an idea as to what this modification as supposed to do?

Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.
#2

Looks like someone was unhappy with the audio high frequency response of the radio and tried to modify the circuit. As you describe it, the mod would act to boost the highs a bit by placing a 50 pF in series with the volume control output. The parallel 400k resistor bypasses the 50 pF cap so the cap has only a limited effect. Actually, the circuit cuts all the lower frequencies so the net effect is an apparent increase in the highs.

As you noticed, the mod has very little effect as it only would relatively increase the highs by only 1 dB or so. Hardly worth the effort.
#3

Thanks for the reply. I knew there had to be a reason even though the modification wasn't very effective.

Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.




Users browsing this thread:
[-]
Recent Posts
Zenith H725
The PSU filter cap arrived today (thank you USPS!) so I will work on that later. Meanwhile, I have the dial, speaker...EdHolland — 06:42 PM
Philco 610B oscillator wiring
Thanks Terry. After checking my notes I think I recorded about -10v at the 6A7 G4/control grid. The screen grid (G3 &...Tubester — 05:59 PM
The list of my radio & TV collection!
Magical chords of forgotten melodies, old nostalgic music on an old radio... Saturday night blues on the Mid-Waves on an...RadioSvit — 12:20 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Thank you MrFixr55 the issue with this radio is that the internal coil antenna is missing and there was a wire in its pl...osanders0311 — 11:34 AM
Philco 610B oscillator wiring
Regarding the oscillator circuit which is comprised of the 6A7's cathode, control grid, and screen grid. These elements ...Radioroslyn — 10:33 AM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Hi OSanders, First off, welcome to the Philco Phorum where Phine Phamily-Phriendly Pholks Phull of Philco Phacts and P...MrFixr55 — 08:41 AM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Today I've been reading through the site trying to learn more about this radio. I also soldered the lose power cord cabl...osanders0311 — 08:24 PM
Philco 610B oscillator wiring
Thanks David! I do have that same later prodution model 610 schematic. I've also studied the Philco service bulletins fo...Tubester — 08:12 PM
Philco 610B oscillator wiring
Some info from Beitmans says late production. David   David — 06:06 PM
Restoring Philco 96
Oh wow! Just found this thread.  Brings me back to early days on this phorum.  I did a 96 back in 2017.  Thread here: ...rfeenstra — 06:05 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 2881 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 2880 Guest(s)
Avatar

>