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

It's been a while... FOUND
#1

Since I've run across a problem like this. I have a 49-905 that I just finished replacing all the electrolytic and paper capacitors. All tubes and resistors check ok. My problem is a hum. It gets louder with the volume control but never over powers a station. I checked all the wires and they appear to be dressed as original. Even though the tubes tested good I swapped them out 1 by 1 with no difference.
Any help will be appreciated.

Schematic

Thanks,

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#2

Eric

Hum can be anything.
Does it change with tuning or stays constant?

Now, often it is a result of bad ground. Look at rivets holding ground leaves where wire solder to. These are often the culprits.

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.
#3

It stays constant, but it doesn't drown out a station when I tune it in. It kind of stays in the background.
One more thing I forgot to mention. When I first got it completed, there was no hum. I aligned both AM and FM without a sound. I put it in the cabinet and played it for about 15 or 20 minutes and then it started. Does that help?

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#4

Hey Eric,
I'd try swapping the tubes you may have gotten a cathode to control grid short internally in the tube. Higher voltage heater tubes are a little more suspect than others. As Mike said check grounds is good too.

Terry
#5

Thanks, Terry. Tube swap has been tried. I'm just going to check all the grounds and recheck all of my solder joints.
I'll let you guys know how it turns out.

Thanks,

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#6

Well, I took it off of the punishment shelf for another look. I tried tube swaps again. It was the 19C8! I replaced it and the hum was completely gone.

Thanks for your help everyone. Icon_clap

Eric
The Villages, FL
Member: Philco Phorum, ARF, ARCI & Radiomuseum.org

#7

Congrats Eric, one more off the punishment shelf.
Jerry

A friend in need is a pest!  Bill Slee ca 1970.
#8

Icon_thumbup Icon_thumbup Icon_thumbup




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Hello Stormlord, Well done on rewinding that coil it turned fairly good for your first one. Sincerely Richardradiorich — 09:12 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Well here it is. It ain't pretty, but hopefully it'll work. I checked it with my DMM on continuity and it keeps and r...Stormlord5500 — 08:56 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Yes, 57 is an electrolytic cap that should be 12 mfd 400 volts according to the parts list from the Phorum library schem...RodB — 06:01 PM
Philco 42-345 Restoration/Repair
Looks like if I am reading it correctly it looks like the silver capacitor#57 that appears to be a replacement is of a l...osanders0311 — 05:09 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Thanks Arran. Yeah this plastic is pretty thin. It's a little thinner than the original stuff. It kinda reminds me of p...Stormlord5500 — 04:37 PM
Testing a speaker and output transformer Trutone A2-G
The equivalent of one short turn is basically the same as that of a shorted load. If it is the primary's turn, then the ...morzh — 03:53 PM
Testing a speaker and output transformer Trutone A2-G
I've never had an output transformer become shorted, the failure mode is usually an open primary, or in a center tapped ...Arran — 03:52 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
As long as the plastic sheeting isn't too thick, I think that the thickness of photographic film would be just about rig...Arran — 03:19 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Well why not! :lol:Stormlord5500 — 03:14 PM
Philco model 38 code 121 not receiving signal.
Good luck next thing you know you will be winding coils just for the fun of it. DavidDavid — 11:29 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 514 online users. [Complete List]
» 2 Member(s) | 512 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatar

>