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[Amps] FL-2100Z

To: <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: [Amps] FL-2100Z
From: vk6apk@eon.net.au (Alek Petkovic)
Date: Tue, 02 Apr 2002 18:36:00 +0800
G'day All,

Just thought I would relate my Easter weekend experience to you.

I spent the Easter period at my beach house. As usual, I took my FL-2100Z 
with me because I wanted to snoop around the bands during the contest.

The amplifier is a very well travelled beast. I comes on many field day, 
iota and holiday trips. It is compact, light and reliable.

Whilst I was operating I was noticing what I thought to be dirty relay 
contacts on receive in the radio. It's an old but trusty TS-530. Hitting 
the ptt a few times seemed to clear it.  After a bit of mucking around, I 
determined that the amplifier relays seemed responsible for the 
intermittent receive in the radio.

As I disconnected the amp, I noticed that the "RF Out" connector was a bit 
loose and it twisted as I undid the coax. It is the single hole, large nut 
variety rather than the square flange, 4 hole type. I opened up the amp and 
saw that the  centre pin of the output connector was soldered to a small 
circuit board containing the swr metering components. When I moved the 
loose socket by hand, I could see the centre pin had come loose from the 
circuit board.

No worries, a quick touch of fresh hot solder and problem solved.

Well, not quite.

After tightening the coax connector nut, putting everything back together, 
it still didn't behave right. Moving the coax at the output socket still 
gave me dodgy receive.

This time when I opened the amp, I desoldered the swr board from the socket 
and turned it over. I could then see that it was a large plated through 
type hole and it had lost permanent contact with the track on the circuit 
board. When I had resoldered the pin earlier, I had only solved half the 
problem. This time I soldered the plated hole to the track on the circuit 
board making sure to leave the hole free of solder so that it would fit 
over the output socket centre pin. I then tightened the socket, screwed the 
board in place and then soldered the pin. This time all was well.

I had no more problems with the amp after that and I was very pleased to 
get up on 40m and work a few good ones in the contest.

Morals of the story:
1: I always hated single hole mounting sockets and I still do.
2: If you feel a socket getting loose, attend to it straight away.

The repair shop at my beach house is very basic. The soldering iron is a 
2.5 inch length of  5/16" copper rod flattened, filed and tinned at one 
end. It has a hole drilled through it half way down its length and a piece 
of 1/8" steel fencing wire, filed square and tapered, is poked through it 
and serves as a handle. Looks more like a little hammer than a soldering 
iron. The iron is heated by removing the cast iron cooking plate from the 
gas barbecue, lighting the burner and putting the iron over the flame. The 
rest of the workshop comprises a pair of combination pliers, 2 ft of resin 
core solder, a philips screwdriver, a flat screwdriver a 2" paintbrush and 
a working beer fridge, amply stocked.

You know, there's not much more that a good handyman could ever need. What 
do you think?

Hope your Easter was fantastic too.
73, Alek. VK6APK


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