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

Philco 19H weak/no reception
#16

Hello, changing to a 10k didn't work. Actually I put a pot in there and had it all over to see if I could find its sweet spot, no luck. I will try a different tube. I did see there is a 36A in the set vs. a 36, I see it is a suitable sub, anyone have any experience with that? Thanks for the help!
#17

Could be a weak tube, for oscillators it could be criical...
#18

I'm hoping that is it I will post the results I hope to find a 36 tube and not a 36a.
#19

Hi everyone, great news! The radio is alive and well. I tried 2 different good tubes and went with the one that worked best. However, either of the two good tubes did not like lowering the oscillator resistor down to 10kohms, so I left the 15k in there. I actually put a pot in the circuit to find its "sweet spot" with both tubes and it liked the 15 k ohms best. I don't care, it works great now, now to add the MP3/ I pod jack so I can listen to old radio shows. I put in the 1/8" audio jack on the ungrounded end of the volume control. It works, but there is some bleedthrough from the am dial. I built an audio isolation transformer from the Radio Shack plans ( I forget where I saw that) but need an adapter to go from the rca jack to the 1/8" audio. Thanks to all for your help here. PS- I just bought another Philco 19 cathedral yesterday!! That one is now on my long list!!
#20

Two Philco 19 make for one 38.
#21

+1 on Ron's comment on lowering the cathode resistor value. I fixed up a 19B about a year ago. At the time I put a 10K resistor there. Last week I powered it up and tried tuning to a station at 610. However, all sound stopped as soon as the dial went below about 720. I tried another 36 tube, but that didn't really help.
I remembered seeing other posts where Ron said that this resistor could be as low as 7500 ohms, so I tried it and it worked great.
Thanks Ron!
#22

(01-18-2015, 05:51 PM)jeffb Wrote:  Hi everyone, great news! The radio is alive and well. I tried 2 different good tubes and went with the one that worked best. However, either of the two good tubes did not like lowering the oscillator resistor down to 10kohms, so I left the 15k in there. I actually put a pot in the circuit to find its "sweet spot" with both tubes and it liked the 15 k ohms best. I don't care, it works great now, now to add the MP3/ I pod jack so I can listen to old radio shows. I put in the 1/8" audio jack on the ungrounded end of the volume control. It works, but there is some bleedthrough from the am dial. I built an audio isolation transformer from the Radio Shack plans ( I forget where I saw that) but need an adapter to go from the rca jack to the 1/8" audio. Thanks to all for your help here. PS- I just bought another Philco 19 cathedral yesterday!! That one is now on my long list!!

I would avoid adding an RCA jack to any radio that did not have one, especially a Philco, every time I see one that someone else added to a radio I remove them since they usually cause nothing but trouble. In order to make one work without AM radio bleeding through you will need to kill the signal coming from the front end with a switch, then you have to worry about routing the cable correctly, and using shielding, and trying to get impedances to match, and this is if it uses a normal volume control with the input going to the grid of the first audio tube. If you want to avoid impedance matching problems, or having to work around archaic volume control circuitry, get an SSTRAN transmitter kit, then you can broadcast your music to an AM radio in the house, no holes, no evil RCA jacks, and no butchered wiring.
Regards
Arran
#23

Hi, thanks for the SSTRAN kit advice, I will keep my eyes out for one.




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Mike, give this site a look for your spider. Can't hurt. Take care and BE HEALTHY! -GaryGarySP — 12:41 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Rod, Bubble packaging? The one I know (if you mean the large bubble type) is really thin. I have some at home. Is there...morzh — 12:23 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Q8. What's the meaning of life? I have read that someone made a spider out of the clear plastic from bubble packagin...RodB — 11:07 AM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
So, Q1. Does anyone know where to get the spider. Q2. If there is no such place, what material is best? I doubt tin is...morzh — 09:43 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Arran The oxidation seems to go deep, a few layers. The break starts right there, but then it will occur on every la...morzh — 07:35 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Mike, This is just a thought, the are on the coil where the verdigris (green oxidation is) I wonder if that is where ...Arran — 06:32 PM
An attempt to remove the Field Coil from a G speaker
Mike; I've made a one or two spiders by using some card stock, and a razor blade, it took more then one try but they ...Arran — 05:48 PM
Philco 91 Restore Code ??
I wondered about that. Wish there was some place local to get this stuff.dconant — 04:20 PM
Philco 89 indicator light.
Bending the lamp bracket (moving the lamp, that is) can possibly change the shape of the pointer a bit, but not its loca...morzh — 04:01 PM
Philco 91 Restore Code ??
Because the usable power rating of it then is (3,200/20,000)*25W= 4W. Maybe a tad more due to the mass, but not much. Yo...morzh — 03:59 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 4385 online users. [Complete List]
» 3 Member(s) | 4382 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatarAvatar

>