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

37-630 Recapping
#1

Just got into one of three of these chassis and was about to start recapping when I noticed WOW, what a pain this is (or is it?) to get into the center section of the underside of the chassis for recapping. Is there a disassembly process to get to these caps? Any documentation on how to do this? Sorry for my lame description, but I believe it's the RF section of the 630 chassis, center section under the tuning mechanism. Any help or suggestions would greatly be appreciated.

73 de,

Gary/N9VU
#2

It is a pain with the patented Philco "Unit Construction" chassis'.

See here:

PHILCO SERVICE HINTS & TIPS - NUMBER 2
Philco 1937 Sub-chassis Servicing Tips

The soldering gun idea in the Tip may help you.

Happy New Year!
#3

I think it is a universal feeling that the 37-38 model unit construction is a total and true pain in the backside, I have yet to hear someone say it was pleasant to work on them.
#4

It greatly facilitated factory production, but no good deed goes unpunished. ;)

No radio manufacturer then ever intended for their radios to last more than a "lifetime," (or the next model year) let alone 70-some years to be repaired/restored.

It's part of the challenge . . .
#5

Thanks Chuck and all who've responded so far. I agree with Chuck about radio engineering 70 plus years ago. The last thing on their mind when designing these chassis was to make it easy for old radio buffs like us to restore the set. I sort of wonder how long in the future they expected old sets to be around?

Chuck Schwark Wrote:It greatly facilitated factory production, but no good deed goes unpunished. ;)

No radio manufacturer then ever intended for their radios to last more than a "lifetime," (or the next model year) let alone 70-some years to be repaired/restored.

It's part of the challenge . . .

73 de,

Gary/N9VU
#6

Normally go ahead and remove the RF chassis from the main chassis. There are about a dozen wires that can be slipped off from the terminal strips by just heating up the lugs. Label the wires and make a sketch as you remove the wires. Maintain the integrity of the tinned wire ends to make it easy to solder them back later. The wire under the cloth insulation is usually too tarnished to solder well. Then remove the hardware holding the RF chassis and lift it out with the wire harnesses. Not as bad as it sounds.

Richard




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Here are the links. 6TPZ and 5TPO The speakers are good. I've tried several known good ones. I just have to fi...R3Sons — 06:27 PM
Philco 91 Tuning Condenser
I just found a set screw. Was able to turn dial just enough to see it and loosen it. I have it off now.dconant — 06:14 PM
Philco 91 Tuning Condenser
Hello, Does anyone know how the dial plate comes off the tuning condenser shaft? The dial itself id so warped I can't...dconant — 06:01 PM
Eico 368 TV/FM Sweep Generator
Ron, for the future: In order to change the name of teh topic, 1. Go to the very first post. 2. Hit "Edit...morzh — 04:29 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Transistors are easy. No converters. If you have input voltage, then just put some signal through. Or touch your fin...morzh — 04:25 PM
462ron
Hi Mike, I believe I tried different ways to change the header for my post but no luck. Anyway thanks for changing it fo...462ron — 04:02 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Since these radios operated in harsh environments (temp changes and vibration) you could touch a soldering iron to all t...GarySP — 03:18 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
Thank you Gary. Hi Morzh. These radios are 6 transistor radios. Sadly no tubes. Thanks though.R3Sons — 02:19 PM
Heathkit Sweep Generator TS-4
Ron Instead of Quick reply, go to New Reply, then go to the title of the very first post, and change the title text the...morzh — 02:00 PM
6TPZ and 5TPO Radio Help
I am not a specialist in car radios. I suspect they might use vibrators to convert 12V to acceptable tube voltages, so ...morzh — 01:58 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 10167 online users. [Complete List]
» 3 Member(s) | 10164 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatarAvatar

>