The Fine Things are Always Hand Made
Comment
I made a dial window for my AW23. It had the original window when I got it (this style: https://www.radiodaze.com/scott-lens-early-5-knob/), but it was a shrinky dink. I ordered some colored overhead slides, cut little strips, and tiled them together with packing tape. Took me a couple tries to get the widths to match the print on the dial, but the end result was quite good.
FYI - there is a Scott service bulletin concerning the many .1MFD 400 volt caps in the earlier AW-23 receivers, such as yours most likely. For any returned to for service, replace with .05 MFD 600 volts caps. Any other values, such as in the bass tone circuit, stick with original values. This was a running change for later production AW-23s. That is what I did to mine using the contemporary .047 MFD 630 volt film caps.
HiDave:By now you have found the info on your radio. There are at least 2 schematics.I am fortunate to have a partner who is a graphic artist with a poster printer and have the 7 knob schematic blown up to 2 feet by 3 feet and framed.
Since J 497 is a 5 knob version, I am putting it together. Following the early version schematic. I have replaced all the resistors and caps with what I find in the chassis, since some values are different from the schematic and parts list. In particular the screen resistors for the 3 IF tubes. The schematic calls for 1 K resistors, and the chassis has10K resistors. There is a 3meg resistor that feeds thru the chassis under the contact strip for the coil wheel. I am still tracing out some of the wiring, since most of the colors have faded out. You may also find that most of the rubber covered wire is crumbling. I found a source for it at bntechgo in a google search. Working on this chassis gives me great info for when I get brave enough to work on K480 which is a complete working radio. I
have completely disassembled J497 to clean the chassis and polish the chrome which turned out pretty well. Let the list know how yours turns out. Thom
Dave: Thanks for accepting my request. May I ask what the serial number is? In 2011 I bought an Allwave 23 in the Waverly cabinet. Photos on this site. I had to have a new power transformer built by Heyboer transformer in GrandHaven. I did a recap while waiting for the transformer. It works well, but needs an alignment. About 6 years ago I bought a second Allwave 23 chassis. It has been ‘modified’ by a previous owner and is in rough shape. It sat under my bench until this this year when I started a complete rebuild and cleaned up 80 years of dirt. First one is K480 and a 5 knob single antenna post. Second one is J497 and is 5 knob with twin antenna posts. What interested me about yours is it is a 7 knob single antenna post. Lots of variations in custom builds. Thom.
Be sure you read the owners instruction manual (available on this website) to learn about the controls to operate it for best performance and audio quality.
Info Archive, select SET Folders, select ALLWAVE 23.
Suggest you recap the receiver sooner, rather than later. That it plays suggests no serious problem, but don't tempt fate.
For the later 7 knob, frosted not clear. I got the part number correct.
The lamp projects dial strip graphics onto the escutcheon insert. Tuning meter tiny pointer also projects onto the dial insert.
© 2024 Created by Kent King. Powered by
You need to be a member of EH Scott Radio Enthusiasts to add comments!
Join EH Scott Radio Enthusiasts