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

...After condenser bank replacement in Philco 20
#9

Gvel

Thanks, I will try that.
I have a couple of Y-rated 2.2nF caps and an X-cap of 0.47uF from one of my projects.

Actually, I could also try a CM choke (to get rid of common mode RF signal on the AC line), and use two X-caps, one before and one after the choke.

A GND wire is usually helpful when using Y-caps, but that was not provided - these radios used 2-prong plug with no 3rd GND wire.

What I also think is good - I have some NTC thermistors I used to protect my supplies from the inrush current upon plug-in, and although Power XFMR itself is a protection, and the tube diode provides for no in-rush for filtering caps, once you introduce an input cap of 0.25-1.0uF, you will see a spark on plug-in, so an NTC thermistor might do some good here.

PS. What the authors forgot to mention that in the very first picture (with 2 Y-caps to GND), where the chassis is not Grounded (and it is usually not), the chassis is actually under floating potential of about 60V (the caps form an AC divider).

Of course, the current is very weak, and not likely to shock you, but it will give you an unpleasant "pinch" if touched.

This "weak" current is actually enough to kill some devices connected to each other. For example these 2 Y-caps without the protective GND were (and still are, in the same India) responsible for RS232 interfaces burning in then desktop computers (and now laptop computers) in Eastern Europe, when connected to local properly grounded devices.

People who do not drink, do not smoke, do not eat red meat will one day feel really stupid lying there and dying from nothing.


Messages In This Thread
Re: ...After condenser bank replacement in Philco 20 - by morzh - 11-25-2011, 07:37 PM



Users browsing this thread: 5 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
91H Code 126 Restore
Well I'm making good progress. All the bakelite blocks have been recapped.  I found that using a heat gun and skinny ...RealRider — 02:35 PM
Philco model 60
>>and found that the field coil is bad. Should be 1140 ohms, tests at 1.1k ohms. You have one stringent crit...morzh — 02:07 PM
Philco model 60
Yes I was there. I got some real bargains there. Plus a Zenith 7G605 clipper that I have been trying to find for a fair ...Radios1340 — 01:46 PM
A Marconi model 86
I have a Stromberg, one of the early ones, seems early 30s. This is what I call a back breaker. None of the early Philc...morzh — 08:28 PM
A Marconi model 86
A backbreaker.....PaulPaul Philco322 — 08:12 PM
A Marconi model 86
>>What a behemoth! A Juggernaut.morzh — 07:47 PM
Philco 70 antenna lead
I am not sure I understood about the coils and the mush. I looked an more than one coil in 20, 70, 90, 60, Zeniths and ...morzh — 07:46 PM
A Marconi model 86
:e_biggrin: What a behemoth!  I hope the final result is as much a quality sounding example!  Keep us posted on your pro...GarySP — 07:32 PM
A Marconi model 86
I should add that the double conversion may only be used on the shortwave bands, but I haven't looked at the schematic t...Arran — 07:27 PM
Philco 70 antenna lead
Yes, that wire will not pick up much interference as routed - the RF at that level won't be affected, and if you have st...radio1 — 07:26 PM

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

>