11-13-2018, 01:37 PM
I was reading around the web over the last few days about potentiometers. Searching a 2 Meg pot, with switch and tone/loudness tap, I started wondering about options to repair the damaged track on the existing pot for my radio.
This rather interesting thread came up: https://www.radiomuseum.org/forum/repair...eters.html
Looking further, I was intrigued as to how the audio taper or Logarithmic pots are produced. That yielded this web page http://www.resistorguide.com/potentiometer-taper/
This implies that, except for the most specialised components the "curve" is really an approximation, achieved with a two part track, the first part having a relatively low resistance change vs pot roitation, and the second part having much greater resistance.
OK, knowing this, how can we ever make a pot new again? Conductive materials are needed, which can replicate the necessary resistances when deposited on a surface.
A while back, I bought some conductive carbon paint. This certainly conducts, but far too low resistance for a 2 MOhm track, without reformulating it.
This weekend, I was tasked with restoring and cleaning up an old wood burning stove. Up to my eyes in stove blacking, I had a notion to test this, rubbed on to a piece of paper. Quite promising results could be achieved with this approach. Next is to test on a piece of Phenolic.
Of course, this is a crazy project.... but I would really like to experiment if this could put the original pot back in my radio, rather than the modern replacement it has. at the moment.![Icon_smile Icon_smile](https://philcoradio.com/phorum/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
Any other experience among forum members?
Cheers
Ed
This rather interesting thread came up: https://www.radiomuseum.org/forum/repair...eters.html
Looking further, I was intrigued as to how the audio taper or Logarithmic pots are produced. That yielded this web page http://www.resistorguide.com/potentiometer-taper/
This implies that, except for the most specialised components the "curve" is really an approximation, achieved with a two part track, the first part having a relatively low resistance change vs pot roitation, and the second part having much greater resistance.
OK, knowing this, how can we ever make a pot new again? Conductive materials are needed, which can replicate the necessary resistances when deposited on a surface.
A while back, I bought some conductive carbon paint. This certainly conducts, but far too low resistance for a 2 MOhm track, without reformulating it.
This weekend, I was tasked with restoring and cleaning up an old wood burning stove. Up to my eyes in stove blacking, I had a notion to test this, rubbed on to a piece of paper. Quite promising results could be achieved with this approach. Next is to test on a piece of Phenolic.
Of course, this is a crazy project.... but I would really like to experiment if this could put the original pot back in my radio, rather than the modern replacement it has. at the moment.
![Icon_smile Icon_smile](https://philcoradio.com/phorum/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
Any other experience among forum members?
Cheers
Ed
I don't hold with furniture that talks.