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"Colin B." wrote in message ...
Barry Mann wrote: In , on 04/22/04 at 09:55 PM, "Colin B." said: [ ... ] So what DOES cause the whiskers to grow? And is there any hope of aligning a tuner with typical bench equipment (DVM, scope, signal generator)? [ ... ] It's a metallurgical problem, crystal growth. Some alloys do it, some don't. I don't understand why they use that alloy in tuning capacitors. They knew about this problem at least by the 50's, maybe earlier. I've heard some concern that the new lead free solders may have this problem. (won't that be fun) Oh joy. As if the problems with lead-free solder weren't significant enough already! Regardless, blowing out the tuning capacitor fixed up the tuner beautifully! Better than I expected, in fact; the tuning dial offset (93.7 appeared at 94.1) disappeared, which makes me think that it might not need an alignment at all. Thanks! Colin If that thing's old enough to have a dial cord then you can usually tune in a a station, secure the knob to keep it from turning, and move the dial indicator along the cord until it's at the spot on the dial corresponding to that station's frequency. If the other stations show up at the right place on the dial you're home free. It's only when reception band is "wider" or "narrower" than the width of the dial that alignment is usually called for and if it's not too far off it's probably best to leave well enough alone (even though leaving well enough alone is not a concept with which I've had a lot of practical experience :-). |
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