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Vintage Radio
By Terry Gray
The AWA 461 MA clock
radio & the Heathkit
RF signal generator
Restoring a vintage radio can be timeconsuming, particularly if you also have
to fix the gear that’s meant to help fix the
radio. In this case, I started out restoring
an AWA 461 MA clock radio and ended
up also repairing a Heathkit RF signal
generator and a Racal frequency counter.
I
T STARTED out innocently enough
when my thoughtful, ever-loving eldest son presented me with an old radio
“to repair”. “Happy Birthday Dad”.
I had a small radio and TV repair
business when I was a lad so it was
not unreasonable for him to imagine
that I would be interested in spending
some of my retirement bringing an old
radio back from the dead. After all, I
still played around with electronics
and had a scope, a soldering iron and
other parts on hand.
88 Silicon Chip
I had even designed a few bits of test
gear for our local BMW dealer over the
last few years, so how hard could it be?
My son bought the radio from a
second-hand shop in Sydney. It was
an AWA 461 MA superheterodyne
clock radio in a burgundy plastic case
that really looked the worse for wear.
It was missing several knobs and the
scratched tuning dial featured all the
popular NSW stations, so it wasn’t
much use here in Victoria.
Nevertheless, a smile and a hug
sealed the deal. “You’ll have fun with
that” were my son’s parting words.
If I had known then what I know
now, I would have fed the thing into
the nearest compactor but that’s not
the way families operate is it? No; I
now had an obligation, an absolute
duty, to make my son proud of his
gift – and of his Dad who will surely
make this thing look and work like
new. Gulp!
It was some months later when I
finally got around to looking at it. Unfortunately, if the outside looked bad,
then the inside looked even worse.
Someone had obviously been playing
with the clock mechanism, as it was
missing many pieces and may even
have overheated at one stage. All four
valves were present at least but to this
crotchety old gift recipient, this radio
was an absolute waste of time. In short,
it was a veritable write-off.
A few days later, I found myself
complaining along those lines to my
neighbour and friend John who lives
across the road. John is a vintage radio enthusiast who has years of experience in these matters, hundreds of
radios and no sympathy for whingers
like me. “Just fix the !<at>#$% thing”, he
said, “here, use this for parts”.
He then presented me with a cream
version of the exact same model radio
from his vast collection. Wow! Such
generosity. I instantly had a few more
knobs, another clock mechanism, and
a “Radiola” label for the front of my
burgundy cabinet. This was progress,
especially as the gifts kept coming.
John then handed me a kit of replacement capacitors. “Change the capacitors first” he said. “It’s always the capacitors”. Thanks John.
Returning home suitably chastised
but with renewed enthusiasm, I found
a service manual for the AWA 461
MA radio at the impressive www.
kevinchant.com website. Here was
a complete schematic diagram (with
voltages), a parts list and alignment
information. Great!
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: the circuit of the AWA 461 MA clock radio. It’s a fairly conventional 4-valve superhet set with a 6BE6 converter,
a 6AU6 IF amplifier, a 6BV7 detector/AGC/audio output stage and a 6X4 rectifier. It also incorporates an electric clock
with an alarm to switch on the radio at the set time. (Circuit courtesy www.kevinchant.com).
I swapped out the electrolytic capacitors in both radios, as well as some
of the black non-polarised capacitors
that had visibly cracked open. Some of
the remaining capacitors looked OK to
me and seemed to react appropriately
when connected to my multimeter.
However, I couldn’t be sure if their
values had drifted, so I logged on to
eBay and purchased a capacitor tester.
It wasn’t very expensive but I was confident that it would prove useful. The
buying spree had begun.
With both radios now displaying
some sort of life, I checked that the voltages at various points on the circuits
were reasonable. Some valves were
faulty but I had enough in my spare
parts drawers to swap them around
so that I ended up with reliable sets.
The next obvious problem was reception. A few faint and garbled stations appeared in the background
when I powered the radios on but as I
live in the Dandenong ranges opposite
some powerful phone towers and in a
house full of switchmode LED lighting,
what chance did I have? Even stringing
an antenna wire outside and ensuring
I had a good ground wasn’t enough to
ensure good reception.
Both radios performed similarly so
siliconchip.com.au
The 461 MA’s chassis layout is clean and uncluttered, with all parts readily
accessible. The clock mechanism is in the centre, next to the loudspeaker, and
is fitted with a dust cover.
it appeared that lack of signal was the
only problem. Indeed, even my car
radio struggles at home until I drive
some distance away. Perhaps if I used
an RF generator, I could simulate some
stations and tweak the alignment to
improve performance.
The Heathkit generator
It turned out that another friend
(Ron) had an old Heathkit RF signal
generator with a handy modulation
option. You probably recognise the
Heathkit name. From 1955 to about
1990, they manufactured a big range
of electronic kits, including radios and
test equipment. It was possible to buy
them fully assembled for a few dollars
extra but the vast majority were sold
in kit form to be assembled by cusJune 2016 89
unused in his shed, so he was happy
to lend it to me. I so wish he hadn’t!
Ron’s RF generator came with a
frozen band-switch and a power lead
with a missing plug. It also had old
microphone output connectors on
the front that are all but useless these
days and so, with Ron’s permission, I
changed these connectors to the more
common BNC type. I then fitted a
new mains plug, lubricated the bandswitch so that it rotated and powered
the beast on.
Everything seemed to work OK. The
indicator light on the front of the instrument came on with what seemed
like normal brightness and, with my
radios whistling away in the background, I could easily tell that the unit
was working. I played around with it
for a while and eventually felt confident that it could provide the signals
I needed for my alignments.
Another clock radio
This Heathkit IG-102S RF signal
generator was lent to me but it soon
failed when I attempted to use it.
tomers whose skill level could best
be described as “varied”. While some
obviously didn’t know which end to
hold the soldering iron, others did a
very professional job indeed and I was
really hoping that Ron’s unit came
from the latter group.
This Heathkit RF signal generator
was sold from 1963 to 1977 and the
IG-102S “S” model would have been
developed towards the end of that
period. What I didn’t know then (but
do now) is that the “S” indicates that
it is a Berkley Physics Lab version of
the instrument. It came with extra RF
output connectors which provided a
high-level direct output RF option and,
according to a YouTube video, is not
suitable for radio alignment due to the
high RF levels radiated from the extra
connectors.
That seemed to be a big call to me.
It would surely be a simple matter to
disconnect the high-output connectors inside the unit if stray radiation
proved to be a problem.
While I was blissfully unaware of
all this at the time, so was Ron. Apparently, he had never used this instrument and it had been given to him
when he helped clean out someone’s
warehouse. From then on, it just sat
90 Silicon Chip
It was about then that I came across
another Burgundy AWA 461 MA clock
radio (just like the one my son gave
me), this time on eBay. Happily, this
one had all its knobs and it looked to
be in very nice condition indeed with
few, if any, scratches.
I accept that this is getting a bit like
the story about grandpa’s axe having
had its handle and head changed several times, with the claim that it was
still grandpa’s axe. However, there was
no way that I could get the cabinet on
the set my son gave me to look as good
as the one on eBay, so I entered the
bidding war. It ended up being a tad
expensive and it had to be picked up
way across the other side of town but I
was committed now and was obviously becoming more so as time went by.
When I went to collect my new radio, I discovered that it wasn’t the only
radio that the seller had. Like John,
here was another enthusiastic collector of vintage radios who proudly
showed me his assorted collection of
different makes and models. During
the tour, I reflected that while he had
this amazing gallery of radios, I now
had a sum total of just three. And mine
were all the same!
My latest purchase proved to be as
good a radio as advertised. The case
had very few marks and its dial featur
ed Victorian stations. The seller also
kindly showed me how he polished his
plastic cases with very fine grit emery
paper and plastic polish. He even gave
me some to take with me and I was
beginning to think that it pays to look
impoverished; people give you stuff!
Back home, I pulled all three radios
apart and started with the clock mechanisms. Sadly, out of the three radios,
none of the clocks worked reliably, so
I had to swap assorted shafts and gears
around in order to get a single working unit. This clock mechanism, by the
way, incorporates the power switch,
an alarm function and a devilishlydesigned “snooze” function that is
entirely mechanical.
The best knobs were then selected
and popped into my ultrasonic bath
to be cleaned up. They are far from
perfect but are good enough and, at
least, I now had a full set.
I then asked John if he had a frequency counter I could borrow so that
I could get the alignment as accurate as
possible. I wasn’t worried about having
the IF off by a few Hertz but I certainly
wanted the radio stations to line up to
the markings on the dial. Some radio
station frequencies have shifted since
this radio was made, of course, and
some have even disappeared all together, but I planned to get everything
as close as possible by following the
prescribed alignment procedure.
Anyway, John presented me with an
old Racal 9835 Universal Counter. He
thought it worked OK but typically,
when I turned it on, it didn’t.
I opened it up and found that the
AC/DC input selector switch on the
front panel had fallen apart internally.
As a result, I bought a standard slide
switch to replace it but its plastic lever needed a lot of filing to make it fit
correctly in the case opening. The frequency counter worked after that but I
then noticed that the least significant
Nixie tube wasn’t lighting up.
Blast! I can’t be sure but I’m confident that it would not have been working when John first gave it to me. And
so, rather than have something else go
wrong, I put the Racal aside and ordered a cheap but cheerful frequency
counter from Asia (more money out
the door). I also ordered some alignment tools online (no knitting needles
for me) and when they finally arrived,
I felt that I finally had everything I
needed to align my radios.
The instructions provided with the
Heathkit RF signal generator advised
allowing some 15 minutes or so for
both the radio and generator to warm
up and “stabilise” before commencing
siliconchip.com.au
The black non-polarised capacitors in the AWA 461 MA’s chassis were eventually all replaced with modern high-voltage
equivalents, as were all the electrolytics. In addition, the twin-core mains flex shown here was later replaced with a
3-core flex so that the chassis could be earthed.
alignment. And so I dutifully switched
everything on, set the generator to
“modulate” mode, and left the room.
I didn’t know it then, but my problems
were about to start in earnest.
What’s that smell?
Twenty minutes or so later when I
returned full of tea, biscuits and enthusiasm, I found my makeshift workshop awash with foul-smelling smoke.
The Heathkit generator was hot and
smouldering on the inside but luckily
its metal case ensured that the internal
fire hadn’t spread.
Suddenly, the lack of a mains fuse
in the device, plus the absence of any
sound from our smoke detector in
the passageway outside, seemed very
scary indeed. So why had the generator
gone up in smoke? And why had the
smoke detector not sounded an alarm?
I thought I’d better tackle the smoke
detector first. It was only four years old
and it still gave out regular red flashes,
indicating (you could say “pretending”) that it was working. Replacing
the fairly fresh battery and pushing the
“test” button did absolutely nothing,
so I had a dead smoke alarm. There
was nothing for it but to buy and fit
a new one.
I confess that having taken the alarm
down from the ceiling, I noticed (persiliconchip.com.au
haps for the first time) its now obvious “Test Weekly” notice. Prior to this
incident, I was mildly proud of my
conscientious annual smoke alarm
battery swapping but let me ask you
all this: who actually tests their smoke
alarm weekly? Certainly not this little
black duck.
I’m actually rather wary of the thing
to be honest. Its 85dB horn is so loud
that it would set my tinnitus-troubled
ears ringing for much more than the
prescribed week.
Anyway, I purchased and fitted a
new alarm (which interestingly didn’t
have a weekly test notice) and com-
The power transformer inside the
Heathkit RF generator ended up
a charred mess because someone
had modified the power supply.
mitted myself to test it every now and
again – with ear muffs on.
Back to the generator
Once the new smoke alarm had been
installed, I opened up the Heathkit
generator to find the mains transformer a charred mess. It was well
and truly cooked and a look at the
schematic diagram indicated that this
American-designed kit had a 110VAC
transformer! However, this unit had
obviously found its way to Australia
and even though it wasn’t fitted with
an Australian mains plug, it did have
a good-quality 3-core mains cord.
A closer look at what was left of the
transformer showed that it had two
primary windings wired in series, so I
was confident that this unit was indeed
designed to handle 230VAC. But why
had it failed so dramatically?
At first I told Ron that his generator
had fallen off the perch and that was
it. However, as I had borrowed the
thing, guilt drove me to try to return
it in working order, regardless of what
would be involved in fixing it.
To prove the lunacy of my quest to
bring this thing back to life, it is worth
noting that the price of an IG-102 kit
from Heathkit in 1976 was the princely
sum of US$44.95.
With Christmas fast approaching
June 2016 91
This close-up view shows the clock mechanism before restoration. Parts had to
be scrounged from three different chassis in order to repair it.
and many requests from my family
for gift ideas for the man who is impossible to buy for, I set my heart on
a Siglent SDG 1010 arbitrary function generator. The more I looked at
this product, the more impressed I
was. This thing could do everything I
needed in the signal generation stakes
for the rest of my time on earth.
Santa duly arrived as expected and
it was mine. As it is a digital device,
I simply select the type of waveform
I want, enter in the desired frequency
and the output level, set the modulation and “voila”, there it is. There’s no
need for a frequency counter now but
should I need one, even that capability is built in.
The Heathkit’s mains transformer
obviously needed replacing so I contacted Southern Electronic Services
in Dandenong South and gave them
the specifications: one secondary at
120VAC 20mA and another at 6.3VAC
1.2A (for the valve filaments and power indicator lamp). They did a great job
at a reasonable price and a few days later I had my replacement transformer.
It was slightly larger than the original
but a new mounting hole was drilled
and it fitted in the case just fine.
I then pulled out the circuit schematic and had a close look at the
Heathkit-designed power supply section. It showed a single solitary diode rectifier. Half wave rectification
would you believe? Wow; very basic
stuff indeed.
I found myself wondering why
Heathkit hadn’t added a few more di92 Silicon Chip
odes for a full-wave rectified supply.
The decision was probably due to cost
but I wasn’t all that impressed.
Imagine my surprise then when I
looked at the actual power supply
components inside the generator and
found that someone had, like me, decided that the power supply wasn’t
all that great and had built their own.
However, in place of the original single diode design, he’d used a voltage
doubler! What the . . .!
So the power supply, at least, was
nowhere near the original design. It
had all looked reasonably well built
when I first looked inside but I now
had no idea if anything else had been
changed, was the right value, or was
even the right way around!
I connected my multimeter to the
output of this redesigned power supply and instead of the specified 130V,
it read 300V! As the valves warmed
up and drew some current, this voltage fell to 220V or so but that was still
way over what it was supposed to be!
But that wasn’t the only surprise.
When I switched the “modulation”
function on, the voltage dropped to
50V! So what was going on here?
The cause was easy to find. The
modulation select switch had a 500nF
capacitor off one leg that was rated at
200V but it was now acting as a straight
piece of wire. In other words, it was a
dead short which went some way towards explaining why the transformer
had burnt out. Replacing it with a new
600V-rated component solved that particular problem.
According to the documentation
I found on-line, the original power
supply featured a dual 20µF 200V capacitor that was fitted inside a single
tubular case. I found a picture of one at
http://www.wb0smx.net/?p=1910 but
sourcing the exact same unit would
probably now be impossible.
After some thought, I decided that
the easiest thing to do would be to rewire the power supply so that it was
close to its original design. The electrolytic capacitors used in the doubler
were marked 24µF but measured 29µF
on my capacitance meter. That seemed
OK, so I used two of them with a new
2.2kΩ 1W resistor between them as the
original schematic specified.
I did make one change though. I
couldn’t help myself and replaced
the single diode with a bridge rectifier. While this would give a slightly
higher voltage than a half-wave rectifier, it would also have far less ripple,
which in an instrument such as this
seemed desirable.
Low RF output
With the nightmare realisation that
the unit might have been modified
fairly heavily in other areas, I then
explored further. The unit featured a
“modulation out” port that was meant
to supply an audio signal at around
400Hz. This was working – but at
180Hz!
It didn’t take long to discover that
the 0.01µF oscillator capacitor (C16)
was way off tolerance and replacing
that brought the frequency up to a
more acceptable 330Hz. However, the
RF output level was miserably low,
so much so that none of my counters
would register a signal unless the output was set to the absolute maximum.
A closer look around the pentode
output stage of the 6AN8 revealed
some clues. First, the cathode resistor
had been changed to 470Ω instead of
the 39Ω value specified on the schematic. This 470Ω resistor was a 1W
device and it had been getting hot!
Plate drive resistor R11 had also been
getting hot and was now effectively
open circuit, so I replaced it with a
new 680Ω unit.
The RF signal strength was still
negligible at the BNC connector so I
checked the input signal at the grid
of the 6AN8 pentode. It looked OK as
did the nice 40V peak-to-peak signal
at the anode. However, this healthy
signal was being heavily attenuated by
siliconchip.com.au
This chassis had been fitted with a new mains cord but had yet to have its black non-polarised capacitors replaced when
this photo was taken. All three radios worked after restoration but only one had a working clock.
the time it got to the output connector.
All that sat between the plate of the
pentode and the output connector was
a coupling capacitor and a few resistors. I replaced the capacitor first but
it made no difference. Unfortunately
though, I was really flying blind and I
really needed to know what the output
signal strength should be.
I downloaded several copies of the
user and construction manuals but
typically, while the index of every single one told me that the specifications
were on page 32, that was always the
one page that was missing. Just that
one wretched page – give me a break.
I then turned to YouTube and took a
look at some of the world’s most boring
videos of guys describing the minutiae
of this particular RF generator. And as
near as I could tell from these mindnumbing monologues, the output is
just 0.1V into a 50-ohm load.
Google also subsequently led me to
a couple of comments about the low
output of these generators and how
some owners had done away with the
valves altogether and installed FETs!
The logic here was that the 6AN8 was
struggling to provide a decent signal
into a 50-ohm load. Others had simply replaced 47Ω attenuation resistors
R14 and R16 with 220Ω resistors to
increase the output.
This was considered valid since
siliconchip.com.au
the generator didn’t have a calibrated
output as such. In addition, increasing the value of these resistors to lift
the output level would also improve
the signal-to-noise ratio.
So what did I do? I took the easy
way out and replaced the 47Ω resistors
with 220Ω resistors as suggested and,
at last, finally had a working generator. It now gave me 400mV peak-topeak at maximum output and while
it’s nothing like the 20V peak-to-peak
(into a 50-ohm load) that I get from my
Siglent, at least it’s usable.
In retrospect, it’s just possible that
the low output problem was the very
reason that the power supply was so
heavily modified in the first place.
It certainly allowed the unit to work
when I first turned it on but, of course,
it didn’t last long.
I won’t tell you how much this all
cost in time and money because Ron
may read it one day and say “you
shouldn’t have” and I will be forced
to punch him on the nose.
Remember the radios?
With the Heathkit generator all done
and dusted, I finally got back to looking at the AWA 461 MA clock-radios.
Remember them?
From this point on, it was all something of an anti-climax because, in
each case, the alignment procedure
went along fairly smoothly. I could
select 455kHz exactly with my Siglent
generator and, with 400Hz of modulation, could easily tweak the IF cores
for maximum output on my scope. The
front-end coils and capacitors were
then adjusted for maximum antenna
sensitivity and to align the stations
with the dial.
The three radios varied in their performance characteristics, so I simply
picked the best-performing chassis for
my final radio. I then straightened the
large dial pulley to ensure that it was
exactly square with the tuning shaft
(necessary to stop the tuning cord
leaping off the pulley every now and
again) and shortened the dial cord a
tad to increase the cord tension and
make the tuning as reliable as possible.
With the main radio finally assembled and looking the part, I turned it
on. The reception was still awful for
the reasons I had described earlier but
it was particularly bad now because,
given the festive season, I had covered
our property at her majesty’s insistence
with Christmas lights; you know, the
ones that flash on and off all the time
and generate interference.
Not much of the original radio
that my son gave me was used in this
set; only a knob and a clock shaft or
two. But he’ll never know . . . as long
SC
as you don’t tell him!
June 2016 93
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