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Re: [TowerTalk] TIC Potentiometer

To: Patrick Greenlee <patrick_g@windstream.net>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] TIC Potentiometer
From: Scott Bullock <scottb@radios-online.com>
Date: Fri, 4 Apr 2014 09:17:55 -0400
List-post: <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
Yea it's a shame a multi thousand dollar piece of equipment is rendered useless 
by just a drop of water. Some people have never had a problem like this. Some 
like us up here have helped keep vishay in business lol. Seems to happen less 
in dry environments like out west etc. 

I've spent thousands of hours thinking abt these problems. It's crazy. Always a 
stupid little thing that causes them to fail. 

Had thought abt putting silicone on the shaft also and may work, in my case I 
never thought there would be enough heat inside the Bellhousing to dry that 
washer out. Was happy to see we got a few seasons out of that mod. Have seen 
pots go bad on brand new rotors less than 2 weeks old. Any of these that has 
the shaft pointing up this is more susceptible to happen to. No drain for water 
to get out...
Scott
N1CX


Salty's 
www.radios-online.com

> On Apr 4, 2014, at 8:59 AM, Patrick Greenlee <patrick_g@windstream.net> wrote:
> 
> Scott, A very innovative and cost effective idea that fender washer.  Do you 
> suppose maybe a little silicon rubber (RTV) carefully applied  might give the 
> washer a longer life.  I suppose you could just form a washer of your own out 
> of silicon rubber caulk and after it cured sufficiently make a small hole for 
> the shaft.  Silicon rubber caulk like the good GE or Dow Corning stuff seems 
> to last forever and never seems to harden of get age cracks.
> 
> Patrick NJ5G
> 
>> On 4/4/2014 7:28 AM, Scott Bullock wrote:
>> John one thing I have done with some success with prosistel rotors is to put 
>> a rubber fender washer with a 1/8" hole in the middle over the shaft of the 
>> pot right at the shaft/bushing of the pot. The small diameter hole causes 
>> the washer to "warp" down at the edges and makes it look like a little 
>> Chinese tiki hat. It sheds any condensation/water coming down the shaft. I 
>> got 3 years out of that until the rubber started to dry out and become hard. 
>>  We had zero problems until this happened. It was the most trouble free time 
>> we've ever had with these. Could be very easily done on the ring rotors too 
>> fwiw.
>> Scott
>> N1CX
>> 
>> 
>> Salty's
>> www.radios-online.com
>> 
>>> On Apr 4, 2014, at 8:18 AM, john@kk9a.com wrote:
>>> 
>>> Apparently there are at least two common TIC ring problems, gear slippage
>>> and indicator failure.
>>> 
>>> Gear slippage should not occur if the guide roller holds the ring gear
>>> against the motor. The further the motor is from the roller the more
>>> likely it will disengage. I have not seen this problem with my older style
>>> units.
>>> 
>>> The sensor is a potentiometer and unfortunately it is mounted in a box
>>> that is not very waterproof. A pot with an IP67 water resistance rating
>>> would sure be nice but I have yet to find one.  Most pots that I have
>>> found seem to have no shaft seal and with them facing upward eventual
>>> failure is likely. Switching to a different positioning indicator such as
>>> a reed switch is also a possibility, but this is a major design change.
>>> 
>>> John KK9A
>>> 
>>> 
>>> To:     "towertalk@contesting.com" <towertalk@contesting.com>
>>> Subject:     Re: [TowerTalk] TIC Potentiometer
>>> From:     "Zivney, Terry" <00tlzivney@bsu.edu>
>>> Date:     Fri, 4 Apr 2014 02:17:42 +0000
>>> List-post:     <towertalk@contesting.com">mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
>>> I seem to recall K1TTT said the earliest rings used a pulse counter
>>> instead of
>>> the pot.  The implication being that the pulse counter approach had problems
>>> and was upgraded to the pot.
>>> 
>>> A basic problem with putting the whirling magnet on the motor shaft is
>>> that it
>>> only counts how many times the motor shaft turns.   But, many of he rings
>>> appear to skip or slip or miss a beat (whatever you want to call it). So, 
>>> the
>>> ring location is computed by counting the number  of rotations of the motor,
>>> not the rotations of the ring.
>>> 
>>> In my case, the pot reliably follows the motor and the spur gear that is
>>> supposed to drive the ring.  The problem with inaccurate readout is not
>>> caused in these cases by the pot but rather by the spur gear and ring
>>> gear losing contact from time to time.
>>> 
>>> It seems that is also the case with the ring in the recently posted YouTube
>>> video of a  TIC ring problem.
>>> 
>>> A pulse counting technique that is counts motor revolutions is not 
>>> inherently
>>> superior to a precision potentiometer geared to that same motor.  The
>>> selected
>>> pot is a ten-turn pot which has lots of resolution potential (sic).
>>> 
>>> Terry N4TZ
>>> 
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
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>>> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/towertalk
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