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

Model 620 Electrolytic bypass
#1

Newbie question. Restoring a model 620; part 52, 16 MFD electrolytic is being bypassed with new 16uf cap, I see where the components attach to the positive side of the cap but is there anywhere in particular where I should connect the negative side of the new cap, is the chase frame OK or should I use a specific ground point. Please advise, your help is greatly appreciated.

God Bless,

Dave
#2

Hi David, Chassis frame is fine. Richard
#3

Richard, thank you my freind, I appreciate it, kudos to you. Icon_biggrin

God bless,

Dave
#4

David B, hi. You used the word "by-pass" and I got the feeling you may be placing the new cap across the old one. You can't do that as the old cap will still be in the curcuit. You have to remove all components attached to pos on old cap to a new attachment point (small terminal strip) with pos of new cap and other end of cap to chassis. PL
#5

The filter caps do NOT go to ground. They go from B+ to the top of the large (usually overheated looking) rectifier B- resistors (#70 on schematic). Download your schematic and parts locator from NostalgiaAir.com

Sometimes it helps the radio by connecting an extra 10uuf from B+ to ground, but first the raw filter caps, the ones connected directly to the cathode of the 80, must be replaced.

As mentioned in the other post, you MUST disconnect at least one side of each of the old filter caps. Most restorers do the one-lead disconnect so that the original cap can be left in place for appearances. Leaving both sides connected leads to disaster- and lots of hum.

Pete AI2V
#6

Dave AI2V is correct, the negs go to B- not chassis ground. Usually the clue is that the cap can is isolated from the chassis either by a non-metallic mounting wafer (twist on cans) or a cardboad or paper insulating tube around the can (clamp type). Manufacturers would not go through the added expense of isolating the cap only to wire it back to chassis. PL




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Model 70 Cabinet Trim
musar , Well if you have any more questions feel free to post away . Sincerely Richardradiorich — 08:56 PM
Model 70 Cabinet Trim
Although I have not made any cabinets or cabinet parts for a couple of years, I still have some parts left over, includi...Steve Davis — 06:26 PM
philcorepairbench.com - shadow-meter
Thanks Ron.fenbach — 02:43 PM
Model 70 Cabinet Trim
Thank you, Gary. Before making my original post, I had clicked on "Steve Davis Cabinets" only to find that it...musar — 02:25 PM
philco predicta
Welcome to the Phorum, cgl18! I am not your resource for television repair, but lots of friendly help is available here...GarySP — 02:12 PM
Model 70 Cabinet Trim
Welcome to the Phorum, musar! You can send Steve Davis a private message (PM). The site is at the top of the Home page...GarySP — 02:09 PM
Model 70 Cabinet Trim
How do I contact him? The only contact information for him I could find when searching online was a telephone number th...musar — 10:38 AM
philco predicta
Hello, good afternoon, I would like to ask what the possible problem could be if I don't have an image on the screen. I ...cgl18 — 10:19 AM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
So one last question before I finish this radio. Regarding the speaker and output transformer. I salvaged the original o...Stormlord5500 — 09:31 AM
462ron
It’s on the bottom of the homepage of our Philcoradio.com homepage! Ron462ron — 07:20 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 514 online users. [Complete List]
» 1 Member(s) | 513 Guest(s)
Avatar

>