I've watched a lot of troubleshooting videos over the past weeks, this is by far the best. Thank you so much for taking the time and effort to film this, I know it wasn't easy. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
A superb educational presentation that I see everyone here likes and appreciates. I myself gained a lot of insight into the trouble-shooting process. We are just fortunate to have someone like this fellow to guide and inspire us in the electronics art. I surely hope we see more of these as I look forward to these videos by this guy. A big thumbs up to this one!!!!!
Satellite_Guy Thanks for your awesome statement on my videos. That keeps me going!
This is truly a fascinating side of electronics , and reading the schematic road map, once you got to the 100 ohm resistor, capacitors jumped out at me, I'm sure a lot learned from this video, I'veI done this a 1000, times over 45 years, but still love to watch you working.
Again, amazing step by step troubleshooting with excellent commentary.It brings me back to my college years when we first learned to use test equipment. I have to say I watched almost with the same intensity as watching a suspense movie on tv.. trying to guess ahead of you as to what to look for, and what you'd see for measurements. Amazing use of block, schematic and component drawings.. I'd love to spend a year along your side to even learn a fraction of your expertise.
+Michelle Pucca Hi Michelle, thanks for the nice feed back and the kind words! I'm really glad that you like my videos!! All the best 73
I fixed many hr2510 and lincolns over the years and found that Q125, Q127 and Q136 are the most common fault causing this sympthom. I have never seen the OP Amp failing when the tx/rx switching problem is present. Shorted caps droping the 8v line supply are common like C110 and the bad caps found in your video. Is very easy to find the faulty part begining from J302 8V (TX contol from CPU/PLL board) and follow it until the 8V drop. Good video and great troubleshoot process.
Your pace was just right for this job. I understood everything perfectly.
Every time I Watch I Love it - the detail explanation and presentations top notch ..!!!
One of the best I've seen. Thanks for the detail, too many others I see don't show the details and details are exactly what we need to see. Thanks so much.
I enjoy the way you take your time and explain everything in detail. Thank you, I am learning so much from you. You are a very skilled electronic technician.
Thank you for this video. My elderly uncle passed one of these radios to me with similar problems. I've enjoyed getting it working again with the help of this video!
Bravo! I've always wanted someone to show me the step by step troubleshooting process! Many thanks!
Let me say thanks for making these videos.
You make it clear what is going on and how to take the needed steps to find the problem.
GREAT video.
Awesome video. I have forgotten the basics of trouble shooting as I have been out of radio servicing for 17 years. Thanks for the refresher course.
A wonderful tutorial that teaches us the proper basics while understanding what we are doing! Please keep up the good work.
Amazing video very informative your ability to explain and describe can make even a novice understand. Keep up the good work look forward to seeing all your videos and learning in the process
Very good work. You got me with this one Peter, I was thinking the voltage regulator, and not a short. So I found a new technique by working towards the regulator. I hope you are well my friend and hope to see you back one day. 73 from Arizona USA.
Cant possibly thank you enough for taking all this time to educate us,thanks again.
My retirement hobby is the repair of early vacuum tube radios. I am now interested in learning to repair more modern solid state radio equipment, so I study and enjoy learning from you and wish to thank you for your excellent video. Some of the equipment that I work on is 60+ years old, the modern components have changed but what is still true is the measurements and rational reasoning involved in the repair procedure to both old and modern radio.
Thank you for your excellent work, you are a very good teacher.
Malcolm
KB1QCJ
+Malcolm Shaw Hi Malcolm, thanks for the kind words! Enjoy the hobby! best 73 Peter
Very interesting and your level of detail is appropriate for a beginner. Thank you.
Hi Cliff, thanks for the feed back, glad that you like my videos.. All the best and Cheers.
Troubleshooting for dummies; excellent. Very much appreciate your thorough step by step process and thought process. I have watched your 4 part balun series which too is excellent, especially part 3 where you explain the basics of the math behind 4:1 and its clear how it relates to the winding.
Nice video Peter. I liked how you did the detective work to find the fault. Keep em comin.
Good, informative information! I'm wanting to learn basic troubleshooting and this was a nice presentation!
This is the best tutorial I have seen for radios. You have done a excellent job..
Every minuet of this video is golden. Brings back memories of the time when I bought my 2830. All those years ago. When I still had hair!! Klasse. Dankeschon Peter.
Super video. Very clear and methodical. A teaching moment for me. I am new to the hobby and frustrated at my ignorance. You helped me in developing a plan when approaching repairs.
Excellent video & fault finding, brilliant test set up you've got in your workshop.
Andy
Excellent thank you. I hope you do more of these step-by-step videos.
You actually made this comprehensible, even for the layman. Thanks for the video!
Thank you for taking the time to do this. This is the first video of yours that I have watched and I will now start watching them all!
A very good explanation step by step to find what was broken in this TX.Bravo for this do it your self demonstration !
This was the best tutorial that I have seen and you make it so easy to understand, tnx for sharing and looking forward to the next one...
Bud...
Great video and good clear instruction on tracing the fault. Thanks
I very much enjoyed your video and learned lots from it. I've a similar tx problem on another radio. I will now use it as a roadmap for my own repair project. Thanks and 73's
+Colm Brazel Hi Colm, thanks for your feed-back and the best for your repair. 73
Great video really enjoyed watching. Your videos make me want to learn more. Thanks please make more tutorials like this.
Excellent video for me who have never done any faultfinding on my own yet. I learned a lot thank you for sharing.
Vielen Danke!! Great Video. Thank you for taking the time to share with us. MFG. David.
Mein Präsident wurde wiederbelebt..Brilliante Fehleranalyse von bestechender Logik und ohne hochnäsiges Geschwafel .Einfach Klasse,Danke dafür.👍
LOL " Mein Präsident ist wiederbelebt"...Freut mich dass es dir gefallen hat. Danke für's feed back
Another fantastic video, thankyou so much for taking the the time to explain your methods..
Dear Respected Sir ,
You are great and you are very talented in explaining .
Your by far my favorite technician to watch
Thank you very much, brilliant job and extremely helpful!!
This was an AWESOME video! Thank you for taking the time to record and narrate it. Very informative, I will pass it on to our local Ham Radio Club members. 73's KE0EYH
loved this video , made easy by the way you taught us to use diagrams , thank you very much peter
You are the best tech I have seen......
THANK YOU.....
You are such a great teacher I wish you lived in my country
I first time see so clear explanation 👍, your english much better like many origin English.
Just finished watching this video. Outstanding. You were very thorough with your explanations. Almost every time I thought of a question about what you were doing, you answered it! Maybe at some point, you could compile a list of your preferred sources for schematics and component data sheets. Thanks so much for taking the time to do this video!
+Mitchell Smith (KB3GKC) Hi Mitchell, thanks for comment and kind words! Well to be honest there is no list of preferred sources. I always use one of the known search engines to find the best result. That's it...73 and again thanks for stopping by!
Excellent job, thank you !
Awesome troubleshooting tutorial! Very well described all the way through. I’ve been fixing consumer electronics for about 25 years, but not so much transceivers. I was following with you with baited breath, couldn’t wait to touch the probes myself, lol. Very good explanation of how to breakdown the components through data sheet research to get a detailed understanding of function, as well as pinout of leads. Your description as how to locate components was also well explained, as well as how transistors of type npn and pnp are turned on by a high or low bias at their respective base leads. I was expecting the 100 ohm resistor to be open, or the IC supply pin to be shorted internally and pulling the 8v down. In which isolating its supply pin by unsoldering would lift the short (loading) and bring back the 8v showing the problem to be the IC. However the shorted cap ended up being the bad guy pulling the 8v to ground low. Note: I hate schematic that don’t show connection without at dot or a jump, sometimes this can confuse a person as to what trace is connected to what else. Awesome job, I felt excited like I fixed the radio along side of you! BTW, I love all of your expensive testing equipment, maybe Santa will be good to me this year like he has been to you in past, lol.
🙂👍
Thanks for the nice feed back Mike. Really glad that you like my video so much! All the best to you
I like this video, because you explain that all the way to do plain to do repair one transceiver. It´s a good idea.
Excellent video and I learned something new - that electrolytics can fail short as well as the usual open, and good tip using resistor to spot where the short is. Thank you also for making this video in English.
+Kyle Morris Hi Kyle, thanks for feed-back. I'm glad that you like my videos! 73's Peter
great video,you made a lot of great tips good luck with all your videos.....great job
Really nice video, learning so much from your videos. No problem by the time taken to explain. Looking forward for more videos. Sorry for the other negative comments. seems that they really don't recognize the importance of basic troubleshooting.
Really enjoyable to watch, your care and detail you took in the faultfinding was fascinating; seeing the schematic the first thing I suspected were the decoupling capacitors, but will heed your more methodical approach after many a time getting it wrong myself by using a 'blunderbuss' approach to repairs.
Thank you for a very interesting video and I am sure we are learning a lot
great vid Peter,im ok with circuits but I no nothing about radios unfortunately, thank you for taking the time to educate us my friend.
Very good tutorial.Thanks
Hello ! Electrolytic capacitors are the shortest life components in electronics and therefor they are usually responsible for most of the problems. That is why some technicians replace all of them in equipment over 10 or 12 years old. These CB models are over 20 years old, most of them, so they are ready for capacitor replacement ! Good job, you seem to be a good technician ( and with a very nice bench). Keep up the good work and the nice videos.
Hi Peter, ok thank you yes it all makes sense, I don't have the radio anymore I sold it some time ago on ebay, but I was always curious about it...snowing here this morning, first snow we have had this year...look forward to more of your videos...Fred.
awesome video, I have a BS in electrical engineering and I am a Extra Class Ham (KK4EDE) and I have zero troubleshoot abilities, I could design a transmitter easier then fixing one, trouble shooting is really an art form, great job and I hope you do more of these type videos... the thought process that one goes through is more than half the battle.
Michael Katt Hi Michael, thanks for your feed back! It is really essential to have good service manuals, otherwise you are lost. I really would appreciate that vendors put more focus on documentation. That should really be a key selling argument!
Love your work ...
Thanks for showing us the repair and hunting process. The board for the lincoln looks really nice, i have a ranger but i just can't find it right now.
Very informative! Thanks!
Hi TRXBench
Sorry to say that you are completely wrong about needing a electronics background!, I am a complete novice but having watched your videos and with your amazing tutorial on this video and others, I was able to fix my President Lincoln which didn't even have the same fault.
Keep up the great work!!!!!
I would give you a million thumbs up if I could.
Justin
Justin Shears Hi Justin, okay in this case I'm okay with being wrong :-) Great that you have a use of my videos! Thanks for your feed-back. best 73 Peter
Great video i worked on these several years ago and found the caps would short so there was no dc bias
awesome video, thanks sooooo much for taking the time to post this video, 73 D.E. KG6DQL
Great video… thanks master.
As usual, I enjoyed the video! Thanks, Peter, I have one of those Uniden President's that I lost the output on, so I have some work to do. 73...Dan
Excellent! Thank you!
*great job and good video man!*.................
nice work !
Hello Carlos, the best way to test modulation is apply a sample of the mic audio to the horizontal input of a scope and an RF sample to the
vertical. The resulting trapezoid pattern will reveal not only modulation percentage, but also distortion, noise, hum flat-topping etc.
And for SSB use the pattern to adjust the balanced modulator for minimum residual carrier.
K4OF.
Very good tutorial.
Great video! Very informative. The mic amp HAS to be able to switch to transmit for hands free keying or VOX.
Nice work
Nice video! It is more helping build my confidence and reinforcing what I should already know. Oh good, a SIP8 4558 dual op amp. That is as Japanese as they come! Roland Boss used to implement those with Roland house numbers hoping no one could fix their products. DIP8 4558s are as common as sea gulls on a garbage scow. . Cheers, happy Christmas, and 73s, KI7AQJ.
I did not hit enter for a day here, Peter. Bad mic preamp chip! $10!! Easy!
Gott Segnen Frohe Weihnachten! 73s KI7AQJ
Thanks for watching Seth and of course for you and yours happy Christmas as well! 73
Wonderful! I believe I would need a brain transplant to be any thing like you in trouble shooting but it is good to learn to capacity any way. Thanks KI7RJS
This is an amazing video, thanks so much for posting such videos. Thanks to Internet and youtube and knowledgeable and kind people like you, these kinds of tacit knowledge can be transmitted to people around the world. 73