Why's it do that? (EE question)

Started by Greg Berge, September 04, 2003, 01:13:33 PM

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Greg Berge

I picked up a 1950's vacuum tube radio a few weeks ago (Traviata AF-610).  Works very well (pulls in distant AM signals better than my "real" radios).  But it does have a quirk.  The volume tends to fall off fairly quickly at about 15 minute intervals.  Generally, all I need to do is walk to within about 2 feet of the receiver and it fires right back up; sometimes I have to tap the volume nob (virtually the only metal contact protruding from a lucite frame).

So, why's the volume falling off?  Is it just losing the signal and needing me to be a temporary antenna to find it again?  Inquiring minds and all that.



Post Edited (09-04-03 13:15)

marty

I don't know the answer although I would try to clean the volume control with tuner or contact cleaner........but continuing this off topic thread:

I bought an amazing antenna that may help me pick up WHCU this season.  It was on close out at Radio Shcck for about $10.  It is catalog 15-1853.  I think that similar loop antennas usually sell for $50 to $90.  This is a knock off of the expensive antennas.  It was a bargain at its normal price of $30!
"When we came off, [Bitz] said, 'Thank God you scored that goal,'" Moulson said. "He would've killed me if I didn't."

jtwcornell91

Hmm, I wonder if I should try to pick up WHCU bounced off the ionosphere down here.  I guess it would probably need to broadcast at higher power to get a decent flux this far away, though.