1940's Radio Receiver Performance Check - RCA CR-88 With New Mica Capacitors!
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
- Mica Capacitors have been replaced, resistors in the RF amplifier stages, and more. Let's test the components and see the difference! This is Part 8 of the RCA CR-88 Radio Receiver Restoration, a part of the Grand Receiver Restoration Series. To learn electronics in a very different and effective way, and gain access to Mr Carlson's personal designs and inventions, visit the Mr Carlson's Lab Patreon page here: / mrcarlsonslab
Part 1: • 1946 Secret Listening ...
Part 2 here: • 1946 Radio Receiver Te...
Part 3 here: • Capacitors And Electro...
Part 4 here: • Receiver Restoration S...
Part 5 here: • Electrical Troubleshoo...
Part 6 here: • Electronic Circuit Tro...
Part 7 here: • Find Intermittent Elec...
Part 9 here: • Restoration Adventure ...
Part 10 here: • RCA AR-88 And RCA CR-8...
Restoration finished: • Finished! Restored 194...
#restoration #electronics #repair
To learn electronics in a very different and effective way, and gain access to Mr Carlson's personal designs and inventions, visit the Mr Carlson's Lab Patreon page here: www.patreon.com/MrCarlsonsLab
God I love your show Please some day have a history of MR Carlson from kid till now like when you started being interested in electronics Thanks mr Carlson
I would like to hear that too, how Mr Carson got into electronics.
I third the motion
Tetrad
Penta-motion
That would be great!
That capacitor at 10:00m sounds like listening the HF bands during a thunderstorm!
Mr Carlsons lab you are good at restoring vintage shortwave receivers and alignment of vintage shortwave receivers
Thanks for sharing Mr
Love watching
It's a big job to change all those capacitors (plus those resistors), but it's something that has to be done !
I'm going to do a similar thing to my 1947 AWA receiver, but it should be a lot easier to do compared to that receiver you have there !
The B+ Voltage on those old mica caps really wore them out. Seems they may have been from the same manufacturer.
Guess we can call it Micamold disease. Great restoration series there with you as a teacher Paul. Time consuming repairs
( from unfortunate surprises) edited for sanity reasons no doubt and more repairs to come before aligning it. Can't wait!
Once again a great video Paul, hope your Easter went well and keep up the great work... looking forward to the Racal and the Collins as well !!!
73 WD8JM
old ARRL handbook pdf is amazing Sir from imsai guy youtube video
That LCR meter is $450Cdn! I didn't know Mastech made high-end instruments.
Where do you source those Allen Bradley-style resistors?? All I can find are metal-film resistors from the "orient." I'm looking forward already to the next receiver renovation. Thanks! 73 Jeff
Silver mica disease in the 4700 pF mica caps?
Mr. Carlson is one incredible engineer, cool when it comes to all the antics of bad caps & resisters. With all his abilities he has the smooth voice of an old time broadcaster. And to cap it off he is proudly Canadian and gracious to all.
Thank you for the introduction, Mary
31:14 that was WWVH in Hawai. Female voice on that one and male voice on WWV in Colorado. They also don't talk at the same time in case they get received simultaneously. So yes, that thing is receiving quite well indeed!!!
Loveliness! I'll be on a lookout for bad mica caps, and the Heathkit signal tracer gave me an idea of hooking my regulated 100...300VDC supply through a resistor to the DUT, and using an amp/speaker for listening to what's happening there.
Another fantastic episode, thanks Mr C. Swapping the components totally enhanced the reception capability, just awesome. I can only imagine at this time just how good this receiver will operate when coils and alignment is final. Having the proper test equipment is obviously a necessity even if vintage, good stuff here. Well done sir, thanks again for a quality production.
Loved the Steely Dan “FM” reference… “No static at all”. Thanks for a great channel!
Noisy capacitor = perfect random generator.
Judging by the sound of your voice, you need your Silver Mica's replaced as well 😄😄😄. Get well soon!!
Enjoying this series!
Excellent Video Mr.Carlson, I enjoyed watching you today and can't wait for the next part.Thank you for sharing you knowledge with all of us.
Thank you. It was really neat to see some failed mica capacitors, especially since it was a big batch problem and how and what you used to test them. I'm 53 now and getting back into electronics again. I started by studying electronics when I was very young and my dad brought me a surplus shortwave receiver and transmitter that fit into a rack and was used by the military. All vacuum tube.😀
Sir, you mentioned that the 47k screen resistors were factory. If I've understood you correctly then you have another otherwise identical receiver with 33k standard factory resistors. Would it not have been more interesting to restore both as factory and then compare their performance, assuming all else is equal? Or have I missed a point?
It would just have lower front end gain.
Really impressive knowledge, love this channel even though all this sounds like obscure sorcery to me
Could explain in one of your videos what B+ is in the tube radios...
Thank you and I really enjoy your videos...
Glad You’re Back!
A very interesting video!
I must say you do have an interesting way of testing for noise with those Mica capacitors. Really good to know when I am working on a noisy receiver I will look for that as well as dried out Electrolytic capacitors and checking tolerance on resistors as well as checking caps for leakage. Thanks for another informative video Paul.
Excellent work A+ Sr. Every time I watch these videos reminds me of my first class in Junior high and High school but your classes are at a much higher level. It wasn't till I went to GM advanced training schools that I learned more. I am trying to convince my son who is a computer science student graduating this year from Stanford University that he should subscribe to your classes and also learn how they work on the inside. Knowledge is power. Thank you, Mike
Way to go Professor Carlson, it is amazing with some tweaking how good a radio can sound. Look forward when you do the final tuning-up and see what happens. Thank you for sharing.
Nice work. I know how hard it is to work in those areas. Brutal. Nice work there.
I don't think much of the Quality Control at the factory that made those caps.
The lighter coloured cap that was fine might have already been a replacement.
Those mica caps were probably quiet for the first 40 years of life. But now it's almost 80 years.
👍Thank you for the video.
I am waiting for the racal ra17, i have had one for a nummer of years and worked with it in my navytime as a radiotech.
Great engineer Mr Carlson sir you are awesome Thanks for the sharing this video sir ❤.
My pleasure!
Perhaps they wanted slightly less gain/sensitivity because the receiver was used with a multi-coupler which had gain of its own.
I wonder was these MICA caps bad from start or they got bad over time.
I've never tried it, but I was wondering if a windshield repair kit might be able to hide the crack in the glass.
I wonder if a thoughtful replacement of any old carbon composition resistors would help with the signal to noise ratio as well ?
I replaced the resistors with metal film ones on an audio amplifier years ago and the background 'hiss' virtually disappeared !
Carbon composition resistors are quiet as well, there are just a lot of noisy ones out there to confuse. For example, My Fluke 5440B Calibrator has many carbon comp resistors in it. Your amplifier that had a hiss issue probably had a noisy resistor, replacing that resistor with a new carbon comp would have resulted in the same outcome that you have now.
Hello Mr. Carlson. Where is the old Agilent DMM with orange pixel screen? This LCD model is booring. Mastech LCR tester? Why not using ESI 2100? Watched your every video, great work against planned obsolescence :)
Great job as usual, Paul. 80 year old radio receiver, sounds great...will sound awesome after the tuning!
That’s some old stuff. I worked in a TV repair shop in high school in 1969-1970. Then in the Navy on P-3s we had old and new electronics equipment. They taught us both tubes and transistors in A school. I think I have an old airplane radio around that I had in a small plane I had with all the discreet components. Circuit boards sure changed everything. It’s amazing how they put these together versus todays electronics.
All those capacitors being bad makes me wonder if it didn’t take some kind of real high voltage hit. Something in the few thousand voltage range.
Regarding the Faceplate. Have you considered a repro from Radiodaze? They're a bit pricey but not scratched. you'd need to transplant the RCA logo button but theirs has the holes to accommodate it.
Im curious, what would you consider the most difficult restoration youve done at this point? After watching your videos, it looked like that 1939 supreme vedolyzer was a real challenge. That thing just falls apart without the faceplate
This gain reduction is probably because it was a multi-receiver installation with a front end aerial amplifier / distribution driving the all. This was quite common with Government listening posts. G8FNR.
I ALWAYS replace paper caps. Good luck on finding new bathtubs! Do you have a calibrated RF signal generator or service monitor so that you can make sensitivity measurements? It would have been interesting to make before and after measurements in the capacitor replacements.
I would have daisy chained those caps to hear what they sound like all together. A complete waste of time and idk if it would even work. My curiosities are dumb sometimes.
I used to have a signal tracer with noise function, i never used. I think a Heath it 12. I never knew these could crap out like that, i am restoring an old hallicrafters sx-42 and did not. Change the micas. It is similar to your set. But has fm. I dont know about screen resistors, my radio has 56k
Hello? i have watched 20 or more videos of your and i though you would be the best person to ask! I Am making a crystal radio, And i have watched 10 or 20 videos how they work and how to make them. I seen this one video ( that i can't find now ) How can i fix something to move the wiper for the coil by using a knob to turn and move the wiper? I'm not going to use a variable capacitor only the wiper but i need to move it by turning a knob.
Hello
I was wondering if large test tubes are available, like the ones you have shown inside large transmitters?
Im looking for a tube that will work like a continuous doide.
Thanks
0
🙏👏👏👏🙏
Nice to see you. Good wishes for Easter!
The words "not nearly as bad" do not belong in a description of any even minimum-quality components at any time whatsoever!
Those look like Micamold caps, which mostly were paper capacitors. Open one up and see if they are true mica, or really paper. Guessing they are paper and not mica.
Great content as usual. Not sure I could bring myself to cannibalize the other receiver though? 😒
Nicely done. Nice video. The PE1KRX was QRV for VE7ZWZ and sends you the best of the seventy threes. Thank you and see you next time.
Those components that are ok now could fail soon as you cant physically determine the level of internal degradation, so why not replace the lot while you're there ?, would seem a better way of future proofing this unit.
I'm surprised that you replaced the micas with mylars, which will show some inductance, rather than more micas or ceramics...
If you buy the solder with the L in it, it's as good as buying the Illinois capacitors with the foil out. ;)
You have opened my eye’s with to all the faults with. Capacitor’s.
Maybe the technician really took care to maximize craptacular uniformity! 😂
"So not too bad on that one. But, of course I'd never trust it! Alright?" - Mr. Carlson
Thanks for the video.
Just wondering could the non standard resisters have been put in, because the caps where bad and that was there sort of fix?
One of the most amazing things to me is the ability of the human brain, not mine, to learn how to understand and control electrons. More amazing than that is, the mental ability necessary to understand all of the components and HOW they channel electricity to other components, to achieve a desired task. To me, it's magic. My 67 year-old brain just can't absorb that much information. I've been a residential electrician and a commercial electrician and have built a few power supplies and Fuzz Boxes for my guitar back in the 70's. But, Magic needs Wizards. And you, my friend, are the Grand Wizard. Always amazed. Hope your channel does well.
What's involved in re-manufacturing dials?
As usual, beautiful things from history, as Mr. Carlson's creativity increases the beauty of these masterpieces touched by the hand of a genius. Greetings to you from Saudi Arabia👍
..love your noise sniffer. As far as I understand, the device basically only applies clean DC voltage to the component and at the same time sniffs out any minimal voltage drops (cracks) that may be present via a coupling capacitor. How high is the voltage that is applied to the components in this method? I already had transistors and OPs that caused similar cracking ...is it possible to test semiconductors with this device?
Do you know what's going on (physically) in those capacitors that is making them noisy?
Maybe you mentioned - but what makes capacitors noisy?
can you not take of the scaleglass and scan it in to your pc, in several parts if it is to long for one scan, and then fix up the image in software to remove any problems, and then make a new one yourself, or have someone else make it from the fixed up scans?
May be les overload on extreme large antennas.... congrats for your video...
I just admire your work on the restoration of old equipment. 40 years ago I had an AR88, just an amazing radio. best regards ra3apq from Мoscow!
Is this similar to "Silver Mica Disease" that one sees in vintage radios?
The restoration series is incredibly interesting and almost addictive...please continue with the restoration of these vintage receivers...the engineering is amazing for the times.
nice review... I have no idea how to do this... but I learn something every time.
Great job. I’ve never heard such noisy capacitors before.
How does RF noise and pulses affect your measurements?
I'm enjoying this series.
Too bad that you have to sacrifice what appears to be a fairly complete radio to fix this one or did I miss how bad the donor really is.
Are the needed coils something you could fabricate?
Cracked and broken glass and dials look like an opportunity to learn about 3D printing, laser engraving, stencil cutting etc.
Thanks for sharing your hobbies, skills and knowledge.
31:15 That was WWVH. That's pretty impressive reception.
I noticed that too. Probably 10 or 15 MHz if it was daytime in Hawaii and Canada.
What wears out inside and is it arcing that produces the noise? Thanks.
I hope you and your family had a great Easter. Great video!
I am curious how the mica's would test using your Carlson capacitor tester. I would also like to see you use the super probe the way you use the Heathkit signal tracer. I would assume that if you put high voltage on that mica it would make noise that the super probe or audio amplifier could pick up. Taking precautions with high voltage involved and using a .01 capacitor between the DUT and the amplifier if that is your weapon of choice. Although, no direct contact is need, even with most audio amplifiers.
Also, Shango66 has some really cool night vision video of "silver mica disease" in action.
Thanks again for doing the restoration video series on this beautiful receiver and piece of history!
Is the assumption that this is silver mica disease, just on fixed caps?
Amazing Engibeer love these videos learn so much Paul is the best of the best number 1 teacher on you tube
This is gonna be brutal when finished Paul! Stay safe n well. TFS, GB :)
You're just stalling for time.
What did you replace those mica caps with ?
I wish there was a RUclips with Mr. Carlson’s lab back in the 1970s. It would make my experiments with taking things apart as a child much more successful..
My guess would be that the proper resisters weren't available and they stuck those ones in because they had them, and got the thing out the door. When or if it was discovered (80 years later), it would be - without doubt - someone else's problem.
Those old resistors have a 20% tolerance unless they have a gold or silver band on them. A 33k ohm can have over 6 k difference and still be good.
thank you
You're welcome!
I might be wrong, but 6-12 months ago it was way less RFI, when 3-6-9 was connected to the radio?
May be its time to hunt the noise? )
Nothing has changed, just a very strong receiver.
nice to shine a light on a historic piece of gear
Watching you work on this receiver is very Zen.
What is the reason of that noise? What is it that we hear?
Those caps would make great components in random number generators.
Assuming it lasts the initial power up lmao
Wow..."Bath Tub Capacitors"..."Silver Mica Disease"...of course we've heard that one before, but...You go, Paul! Lol.
Thanks for your time
Those 2 RCAs are simply gorgeous!!!
Looks Latin to me