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

B&K RF Signal Generator Repair
#1

Help! Does anyone know where I can get my B&K E200D signal generator repaired. It is solid state and I think that is what is keeping people away.
It worked really good until it quit. No output on any frequency.
I have the manual including schematic and troubleshooting guide.
I found someone in Canada to look at it but shipping one way would be $54.00.

Thanks,

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#2

Eric,

what is wrong with getting an oldie but goodie tube or maybe transistor generator?
I am a professional in both the field of electronics troubleshooting and the field of electronics design, but I would never go for solid state unless it was soooooooo cheap that losing it would be unnoticeable. They will not give you the schematic and there may be proprietory chips, CPLDs, microprocessors with code I have no idea how to fix.....
I never buy equipment I cannot fix myself.

basically what I am afraid of, the repair alone, without shipping, may run you more or at least be comparable to the cost of a new unit. No one really repairs those unless they are under warranty.
What are they, 200-300 bucks?
#3

I have the manual including schematic and troubleshooting guide.

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#4

Well, does it use chips and what kind? Any micros? Does the digital part (interface/display) work and no signal, or nothing works at all?
#5

No chips or micros all components including a few transistors are on circuit boards. The power light goes on. The moduation meter operates as well as the crystal calibrator. The carrier strength meter is dead and there is no output. I know nothing about solid state circuits. H**l, I'm not even comfortable with tubes yet!

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#6

Can you post the schematic? Or a link to it?
#7

Sure. Here it is: http://www.freeinfostuff.com/E200D/E-200D.htm This gives a lot of info.

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#8

OK.

Do you know how to check a transistor?

If not, here's how:

1. Take an ANALOG Ohmmeter.
2. Set it to Ohms, x1 range.
3.
For an NPN transistor:
Put a positive lead to the base, and touch the emitter and collector with the negative. It should conduct. Reverse the leads. Do the same. There should be no conductivity at all. Any conductivity means leakage and the transistor is bad.
For a PNP transistor: same procedure, only leads are reversed. Negative to the base conducts, positive - does not.
4. For any transistor: put one lead to emitter and another to collector. There should be no conductivity. Reverse leads, same thing.

Transistors rarely lose their H21E (Beta) so as long as the integrity test above is good, your transistor is good.

Now that you know that:

Take your schematic, and start checking transistors starting from Q3 and back.


Question: do you have a scope?

PS> Eric, I can guide you through it, but you need to have a basic equipment. A scope would make it easy.
#9

Don't forget to have him check from emitter to collector, too. I've had more than enough E-C shorts while the B-E and B-C seemed fine.
#10

OK Morzh, I don't have an analog meter. DVM can't be used? I should have a scope in the next few day. It's way from Arizona. I'm willing to try.

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#11

Brenda,

If you read my post one more time you will seed that the #4 is exactly that.
#12

Eric

Yes you can check it with a DMM but I find it a PITB.

Put the DMM to "diode" check. When checking B-E/B-C where the analog meter shows condutivity you will see about "0.7V". In the opposite direction you won't see anything.

Same goes for the E-C check, you should not see any serious conductivity (maybe some megohms).
You can start doing that before the scope arrives.
#13

Also don't forget that if the transistor doesn't conduct in either direction B-C or E-B it could be open, that happens a lot especially with the older solid state stuff.
Regards
Arran
#14

Thanks Guys,
I'll check it out and let you know.

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#15

I checked the transistors. Three failed Q2, Q3 & Q10. Should I order new ones or do you think I should wait for the scope?

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org





Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco 46-420 Code 121 Reception issues
Welcome Eric, I agree with Bob and far as the two main electrolytic filter capacitors did you change them yourself or w...radiorich — 11:43 PM
Philco 46-420 Code 121 Reception issues
You mentioned the Philco manual and going through the check points...just to be sure we're on the same page here's the m...klondike98 — 08:13 PM
Philco 42-1008 conversion kit
Interesting. I haven't seen that before.klondike98 — 07:02 PM
12' Philco
Yes I had looked for it on the web as well some time back and could not find it. I was glad to see it turned up in Ron'...klondike98 — 06:59 PM
Shadow Meter Bulb
Now if you had a set with a tuning light then the bulb type is important to the circuit, some sets used those prior to t...Arran — 04:58 PM
Shadow Meter Bulb
Ok. Thanks for the correction.RossH — 03:09 PM
Model 28L
For 28 you will probably need to buy a Hammond 125CSE. Or any of the series of the power you need, with SE suffix. Then ...morzh — 02:09 PM
37-60 revision 6
I am restoring a Philco 37-60 and it shows run 6 they removed the ground from G3 of the 6K7G and put the G3 to -2.5v for...bobbyd1200 — 01:01 PM
Shadow Meter Bulb
Mike is correct on the bulb connection, two separate circuits. I found that by rotating the bulb and sliding it forward ...RodB — 12:19 PM
Hickok AC51 tube tester
Cleaned ann contacts, switches and sockets, works great now.martinj — 11:32 AM

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

>