I thought I would add one more comment-I took the vibrator in my Snap-On Ignition Analyzer apart and repaired it yesterday, based on the information in this video! Thanks to what I learned here, my 50-60 year old ignition analyzer is now tested and working!
@RAK4022 ай бұрын
Great video! I am about to service a vibrator in a coil analyzer and this will help a very great deal!
@zacharyneuman41797 ай бұрын
American Flyer trains of the 1950s used these vibrator tubes for their "Air Chime Whistles". Trains run on 60hz and the tubes send 600hz through the track which is picked up by a speaker in the locomotives. These whistle tubes are all going on 70 or more years old and more often than not they don't work. I have a few torn apart on my work bench and this video will definitely be helpful in repairing them.
@gpitt19605 ай бұрын
Awesome explanation!
@hphpackardlowrey27765 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@andrewandrosow4797 Жыл бұрын
Hello! Good work! But what to do when this radio can receives only MW/LW bands? There are lots of EMI noise in cities and towns - because LED lighting on streets. Next to each lamp post there will be buzzing from a speaker.I mean an night and evening.
@hphpackardlowrey2776 Жыл бұрын
The radio alignment process makes it so it will reject any stray frequencies coming through the antenna, but if there are frequencies being picked up by the car chassis these can get picked up as they are not adequately filtered by the radio circuitry. Do you have all the recommended suppression capacitors installed? See your car service manual and/or radio owner's manual for where to put them.
@andrewandrosow4797 Жыл бұрын
@@hphpackardlowrey2776 To reject EMI noise in your car's radio DC/DC converter, I would first change two electrolytic capacitors to new low-ESR capacitors at 22 uF and 400 volts (I mean 2 capacitors after the rectifier). This update must usually helps - because old electrolytic capacitor usually "dry" and therefore does not have capacitance: you can hear loud "rrrr" from the radio speaker in any position of loudness regulator. Secondly, if it has not helps, I would checking the rectifier: are the both diodes working properly? If not - I would change the vacuum rectifier on the HER307 semiconductor diodes.