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

Model 66b Warm-up drift
#1

Replaced all electrolytic & paper caps along with 6 resistors. Did not replace the bakelite caps. I've noticed that it takes about 15 minutes for the radio to warm up and stop frequency drift. Is this normal for a 1935 radio or could it be attributed to another item, such as bakelite caps? Bob. Icon_confused
#2

All old sets drift a little bit. I think you probably still have one or more carbon resistors that is high in value, and it gets worse with a little heat. At a nickel or so apiece, why haven't you replaced them all? Wirewounds are either good or bad or shorted to the chassis. It's a crapshoot with mica capacitors, usually you get crackling or loss of signal, but drifting could also occur. Of course there are more bizzare things that could be going on too.

Let's see who else has some tips.
#3

Hi Bob,

Well, it wouldn't be unusual to note some drift in the first 15 minutes but the question is how much is too much. In relative terms you should be able to turn it on to an AM station and maybe have to touch it up slightly once after warmup. Shortwave would be different.

I can't think think of a scenario where any of the Bakelite caps would cause this unless they were really leaky and pulling down the voltage - and that's not out of the realm of possibility. I'd rebuild them on general principle because there's so many other potential problems that could develop.

If you have another 6A7 handy you might try it. I've caught excessive drift in many radios due to some problem with the LO/Converter tube.

Just my 2 cents.

-Bill
#4

Thanks for the replies. Besides not replacing any of the bakelite caps, I also did not replace any of the dog-bone resistors. Looks like I have some more work to do. Bob




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco Model 16 wiring question
Measure the voltages first, just in case.morzh — 02:19 PM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
Haven't thought of Burgess batteries in a while Mr. Fixer. Boston Edison always used Burgess in their Bright Star yellow...Paul Philco322 — 02:17 PM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
Thanks Sam. I'll let you know. I can probably scare some up from the local radio club.klondike98 — 02:07 PM
Philco 89 Code 123 Osc Coil
Hello,  I thought I would post my findings on my bad oscillator tickler coil. There were 27 turns on the outer coil b...dconant — 12:38 PM
Philco Model 16 wiring question
Thanks Morzh. So it appears I did wire it incorrectly and I have to switch the wires between pins 2 and 4.bobclausen — 09:24 AM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
No, it's not a problem, just during certain condition it could show up. Yes, an internal tube short could do that too. ...morzh — 09:13 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
You sound guys are never satisfied. :crazy: :clap:RodB — 09:10 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
I got some new ceramic octal tube sockets installed and also tried some different coupling caps.  The results:  The go...TV MAN — 08:42 AM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
I pulled the tube out and it's shorted from pin 1 to pin 2. I suppose that's the problem...sq65 — 08:12 AM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
bob  Nice work on battery . If you don't. Have terminals i have a few spares  Samsam — 02:12 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently no members online.

>