The Fine Things are Always Hand Made
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Thom - There are only a couple known schematics for the AW23, I'm sure neither of them will cover this set precisely. I would suggest that if you go through it, follow the AW23 restoration guide that Norman wrote some years ago. If you spot areas of the set that differ significantly from the diagrams, sketch it out and we can add the information to the library. There is a note in the service literature that all sets above 500 have the new tuning condensers in the IFs. Does this set have them? The other complication is if the set was sent in for service, it may have been modified at that time - this makes building a timeline of changes even harder for us 85 years later...
Thom -
I have lots of parts chassis, if you can send me a pic or indication of which trimmer you need, I can pull one off a parts chassis. Anything else you need too...just let me know. It's possible your set went back to the factory and got the IF trimmer update during service. It may show traits of both early and late AW23s.
Kent
Interesting...is the power resistor open? I've seldom seen a bad divider in the AW23 sets. I don't part our salvageable sets, the ones on my parts line are way too far gone - often, they were missing major parts when I picked them up. I have a bit of everything on the parts line - let me know if you need something.
Kent
Thomas Day said:
Hi Kent:
Thanks for the reply. I think this set is factory original, since modifying it to the later twin antenna system would be difficult at best. I found a source for the trimmer caps, but thanks for the offer. I also found a Pro Wire source for flexible rubber covered wire in several sizes and will use it to replace the deteriorated wiring. I was able to remove the coil covers and clean them up. All of the capacitors are original and will be replaced. I also got three power resistors to replace the B stick divider and will mount them on terminal strips. I will have the schematic blown up to 18X24 which will help a lot. Still not sure where the red/yellow wire comes from or goes to, since the colors are really faded out. It also has the filament bypass caps for the oscillator tube.
It does pain me a little to see these turned into parts sets, but I understand that not everything can be saved or restored easily. This one could easily become a parts set, but I love a challenge. This one seems to be a transitional set between early and late versions and as such is worthy of restoring.
Again thanks for the reply. I appreciate any and all comments and help anyone can provide.
Thom.
Thom:
I use silicone rubber insulated test lead wire to replace the original rubber wire. It is available in similar gauges of wire and diameters of insulation and will outlast other types of rubber. Like Kent, I have many parts and parts chassis. If Kent doesn't have parts you need, let me know.
Norman
Thomas Day said:
Hi Kent:
Thanks for the reply. I think this set is factory original, since modifying it to the later twin antenna system would be difficult at best. I found a source for the trimmer caps, but thanks for the offer. I also found a Pro Wire source for flexible rubber covered wire in several sizes and will use it to replace the deteriorated wiring. I was able to remove the coil covers and clean them up. All of the capacitors are original and will be replaced. I also got three power resistors to replace the B stick divider and will mount them on terminal strips. I will have the schematic blown up to 18X24 which will help a lot. Still not sure where the red/yellow wire comes from or goes to, since the colors are really faded out. It also has the filament bypass caps for the oscillator tube.
It does pain me a little to see these turned into parts sets, but I understand that not everything can be saved or restored easily. This one could easily become a parts set, but I love a challenge. This one seems to be a transitional set between early and late versions and as such is worthy of restoring.
Again thanks for the reply. I appreciate any and all comments and help anyone can provide.
Thom.
Working on J497 Allwave23 continues:
I am in process of rebuilding this chassis, and finding some differences between the schematic and actual parts used. The screen resistors for the 39/44 tubes are listed as 1K on both the schematics I have for the early and late versions. The parts callout in the chassis photos call for 5K resistors and the chassis has 10K resistors.
Knowing that Scott made running changes in production, this shouldn't surprise me, but this is a pretty wide variation. The plate voltage is listed as 235 volts and the screen as 90 volts. These come from different sources, and screen current is minimal. So, replace with what I find, or follow the schematic. I have the schematic blown up to 2 feet by 3 feet and the component values are plainly visible. Other values in the chassis pretty much conform to the schematic. Just another 'interesting' variation in custom production.
Thanks
Thom
My rule, if close inspection of solder joints and such so it looks original, stick with actual component values seen.
But, there is a Scott service bulletin stating during servicing to replace the many the 400 volt .1 caps with 600 volt .05 units, except those on the tone controls.
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