telefunken opus 6 rectifier
Posts: 200
Threads: 36
Joined: Jul 2016
City: Spring Lake MI
Telefunken Opus 6, just finished recapping this radio. It has a selenium rectifier in a black tube under the chassis. Playing this radio for about 10 minutes the rectifier was quite warm but not "hot" how hot does it have to be to replace it. If it needs replacing, how should it be done, what method.
Jim
Spring Lake MI
Posts: 1,824
Threads: 114
Joined: Jul 2014
City: Sneedville, TN
Selenium rectifiers are either good or bad. If it works, it works. They usually have fins on them for air circulation cooling. I have never seen one in a tube, can't imagine it, unless that tube had a fan with it to direct an air flow over the selenium rectifier. Pictures of this set up might help. Oh, and, in case you don't have a manual, I found one free on the net : https://elektrotanya.com/telefunken_opus...nload.html
(This post was last modified: 06-01-2021, 09:47 PM by mikethedruid.)
Posts: 1,106
Threads: 88
Joined: Jun 2011
City: Tacoma
State, Province, Country: Washington
1) If you do replace it, simply do so with four identical silicon rectifiers or a single silicon full wave bridge.
2) I've dealt with those canned seleniums many times. They do fail, often open but on occasionally they will short with catastrophic consequences. .
Posts: 1,824
Threads: 114
Joined: Jul 2014
City: Sneedville, TN
Never have seen one in a can myself. This is what I am familiar with when it comes to selenium rectifiers:
[Image: http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-0dGNno5UUQs/UY...2b5eb1.jpg]
or
[Image: https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/...%3DApi&f=1]
but nothing with any kind of tube. As you can see from the pictures, they have fins for air cooling. I looked at the schematic, and it looks like a pretty bog standard bridge rectifier.
Posts: 1,106
Threads: 88
Joined: Jun 2011
City: Tacoma
State, Province, Country: Washington
This is the beastie. They are known for failure.
Posts: 1,824
Threads: 114
Joined: Jul 2014
City: Sneedville, TN
I'm not surprised they are known for failure. Without the fins to cool them they are just asking to overheat and fail. I would think that a modern diode bridge which can mount to a proper heat sink would be a much improved replacement for that disaster waiting to happen. One of the small, square ones with the hole through the middle for chassis or hear sink mounting would do the trick.
Posts: 1,106
Threads: 88
Joined: Jun 2011
City: Tacoma
State, Province, Country: Washington
Wouldn't even need a heat sink. Just use a 1A 600PIV bridge, it will never get warm.
Posts: 200
Threads: 36
Joined: Jul 2016
City: Spring Lake MI
BrendaAnnD,
https://www.mouser.com/datasheet/2/308/1...316001.pdf
Is this what you are talking about.
Would I need a voltage reducing resistor.
Jim
Spring Lake MI
(This post was last modified: 06-02-2021, 07:34 AM by Jimradio.
Edit Reason: add
)
Posts: 1,106
Threads: 88
Joined: Jun 2011
City: Tacoma
State, Province, Country: Washington
More like this. The one you found is an SMD, which is not ideal for this application.
https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Tai...uu0g%3D%3D
I actually have several, and would be happy to send one.
As for the resistor, I've never used one. The voltage difference with a full wave bridge is only about 20 volts tops, which will not harm the radio.
(This post was last modified: 06-02-2021, 08:10 AM by BrendaAnnD.)
Posts: 1,125
Threads: 44
Joined: Feb 2015
City: Roseville, MN
I had to replace the selenium rectifier in a Grundig and the B+ went up about 20 volts. But had to add a dropping resistor to make the FM rf amplifier work. It was very touchy. When the voltage was brought down to what the schematic showed, everything worked. BTW, the Grundig selenium rectifiers are encased in a flat metal case attached to the chassis.
Posts: 16,483
Threads: 573
Joined: Oct 2011
City: Jackson
State, Province, Country: NJ
the bridge I had in my Grundig works perfectly fine, so I left it there.
It is very small flat pack one.
If you check the voltage against the sch and it is where it should be, you can leave it in place.
People who do not drink, do not smoke, do not eat red meat will one day feel really stupid lying there and dying from nothing.
Posts: 200
Threads: 36
Joined: Jul 2016
City: Spring Lake MI
Brenda PM sent.
Jim
Spring Lake MI
Posts: 200
Threads: 36
Joined: Jul 2016
City: Spring Lake MI
Hi everybody, the selenium rectifier has been replaced with a new bridge rectifier. The voltage reads 280v at the + coming off the bridge, the schematic shows it should be 255v it is 25v higher than the schematic. Should this be dropped with a resistor and if so what resistor would be needed.
Thanks
Jim
Spring Lake MI
Posts: 1,106
Threads: 88
Joined: Jun 2011
City: Tacoma
State, Province, Country: Washington
Measure the current draw between the positive terminal on the bridge and the place it connects into the radio. Multiply the voltage (25) by the current you get in amps (ex. 50mA = 0.05A), this would give you a result indicating a 500 ohm resistor rated at at least 3 watts (actually 1.25W, but always go up a bit for safety and longevity.)
Your calculations will vary of course, since 50mA was just an example in this case.
Posts: 16,483
Threads: 573
Joined: Oct 2011
City: Jackson
State, Province, Country: NJ
>>Multiply the voltage (25) by the current you get in amps
I am sure you meant "divide". 
Then you indeed get 500 ohm.
People who do not drink, do not smoke, do not eat red meat will one day feel really stupid lying there and dying from nothing.
Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
|
Recent Posts
|
Need Help to ID this radio 11 tube Philco
|
Yes the 16B as morzh pointed out. Specifically its the January 1935 model version of the 16B. There are a couple earli...klondike98 — 11:51 PM |
48-482 rear panel help
|
Welcome to the Phorum, keithchip! How far you take a radio on cabinet restoration is a matter of personal preference. ...GarySP — 11:28 PM |
48-482 rear panel help
|
I've recently finished the internal restoration of a locally purchased Philco 48-482. The cabinet is in ok shape except ...keithchip — 10:28 PM |
Need Help to ID this radio 11 tube Philco
|
Welcome to the Phorum, Ken! Lots of help here for all of your restoration questions. Take care and BE HEALTHY! - Gar...GarySP — 07:59 PM |
Need Help to ID this radio 11 tube Philco
|
Thank you.
I went to your online library and found 2 schematics.
I will download and compare to components!Ken D. — 06:31 PM |
Need Help to ID this radio 11 tube Philco
|
It is a 16B tombstone.morzh — 06:13 PM |
Zenith H725
|
David - sorry, I reread your post and finally saw THD - now the % figures make sense. Thanks for explaining.
The PSU...EdHolland — 06:06 PM |
Need Help to ID this radio 11 tube Philco
|
Hi Everyone,
New member but have been reading this for awhile for tips!
Vaccum tubes were before my time so bear with ...Ken D. — 06:03 PM |
My Philco 37-116 Restore
|
Thank you MrFixR55, I appreciate your comments very much. I do not detect much hum if any so I will be staying with the ...dconant — 05:15 PM |
My Philco 37-116 Restore
|
Hi DConant
Yes, you can replace chokes with resistors. You do stand the risk of increased hum. the solution is to inc...MrFixr55 — 04:23 PM |
Who's Online
|
There are currently no members online. |
|

|