[Amps] storing radios???

Charles Harpole k4vud at hotmail.com
Sat May 5 09:14:33 PDT 2012


 I again am puzzled about how we hams want to baby and pamper our things, our radios.  They are lots more rugged than we think, I guess, and it would be better, I think, to just store the thing, whatever, and forget it.  You likely should change out the caps later, anyway, and if the tube goes bad by sitting, I just say I doubt it.
We think we are buying stuff new when it comes in the factory sealed box.  We forget that many items, like my IC7800 was manufactured four or five years before I got it brand new.  The items we buy as new have been made (with parts of unknown age), sat in factory storage, shipped in blazing hot condx, sat in retailers storage in freezing condx (up North), and then mailed to us "as new" where they are handled by many large monkeys who practice jump shots with them, or just drop them.  THEN, we open the box thinking our precious radio just popped out of the assembly line and came to our hands on the wings of angels.  
My IC-7800 blew its finals all by itself, as about 30% of them are doing, and in warranty shipping it in the original two boxes, a UPS monkey dropped it and bent up the rear BNC sockets.  ICOM Bellevue fixed the sockets for about $350 and fixed the rest on warranty, gave me a new set of boxes, and tomorrow I will open it to enjoy again, I hope.  My point is that this radio has undergone extensive bad handling, hot and cold condx, STORED FOR YEARS, and so on and when I get it on the table, will look just like new and act same too, I hope.

Our precious stuff gets fully "tested" before we see it.  It does not need babying, coddling, run at reduced power to make the final tubes run longer, or any of the other rather loonie things I hear people doing.... using more care on the radio than their children.  Wake up, a radio is just a thing.  73

Charles Harpole
k4vud at hotmail.com   


 		 	   		  


More information about the Amps mailing list