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   sci.electronics.repair      Fixing electronic equipment      124,925 messages   

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   Message 124,456 of 124,925   
   Cursitor Doom to piglet   
   Re: Oscillator Distortion   
   17 Oct 24 13:35:24   
   
   XPost: sci.electronics.design   
   From: cd999666@notformail.com   
      
   On Thu, 17 Oct 2024 13:35:14 +0100, piglet wrote:   
      
   > On 17/10/2024 12:28 pm, Cursitor Doom wrote:   
   >> On Thu, 17 Oct 2024 11:33:52 +0100, piglet wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> On 16/10/2024 3:20 pm, Cursitor Doom wrote:   
   >>>> On Tue, 15 Oct 2024 16:14:21 +0100, Liz Tuddenham wrote:   
   >>>>   
   >>>>> Cursitor Doom  wrote:   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>>> On Mon, 14 Oct 2024 11:41:24 +0100, Liz Tuddenham wrote:   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>>> Cursitor Doom  wrote:   
   >>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>> On Sun, 13 Oct 2024 17:39:53 -0700, Dave Platt wrote:   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>> In article ,   
   >>>>>>>>> Cursitor Doom   wrote:   
   >>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>>> I've found an issue with the principal oscillator. It's   
   >>>>>>>>>> generating distorted sine waves. It's a wien bridge type using   
   >>>>>>>>>> BJTs as the gain element and fine tungsten filaments as   
   >>>>>>>>>> thermistors, so should produce near perfect sine waves before   
   >>>>>>>>>> they're chopped and shaped by subsequent circuitry, but since   
   >>>>>>>>>> the fall, it's not.   
   >>>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>>> Is there a chance that the impact broke one of those fine   
   >>>>>>>>> tungsten filaments?  Do they read low-Z when cold, as they   
   >>>>>>>>> should?   
   >>>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>>> It's one thing I need to look at, if only for the sake of   
   >>>>>>>> completeness,   
   >>>>>>>> next time I have access to it. Since these are so hard to   
   >>>>>>>> replace,   
   >>>>>>>> I'd really rather deal with my original suspicion that something   
   >>>>>>>> got shorted out in the fall.   
   >>>>>>>   
   >>>>>>> Could a pre-set pot have gone open circuit?   
   >>>>>>   
   >>>>>> I don't think so. TH2 on the schematic appears to have gone open   
   >>>>>> circuit. Those filaments are pretty fragile! Not sure what they've   
   >>>>>> used - looks like one of those old dashboard bulbs you see in old   
   >>>>>> cars. I won't be able to find a direct replacement, but I do have   
   >>>>>> some spare thermistors from other wein-bridge test gear I've   
   >>>>>> plundered over the years which I dare say could be pressed into   
   >>>>>> service with a little teak of the biasing. I might even experiment   
   >>>>>> with some small filament bulbs which are not part of the WB variety   
   >>>>>> just out of curiosity.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>> The circuit, is pretty similar to the Venner TSA 625/2, which was   
   >>>>> sold as a standalone general purpose oscillator - one of which I   
   >>>>> have in pieces on the desk in front of me.  The thermistor (which is   
   >>>>> TH1 in this circuit but more likely to be TH2 in yours) looks like a   
   >>>>> glass tube, about the size of a DM70 valve (for those who remember   
   >>>>> them), with two flying leads.  It is supported in a plastic clip.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>> The interior has a pinch with two substantial, longish support   
   >>>>> wires. Joining the ends of the support wires there is a very fragile   
   >>>>> wire and suspended by that wire is the thermistor bead.  The idea is   
   >>>>> that the glass tube is evacuated and there is very little thermal   
   >>>>> conductivity along the support wires, so the bead is free to   
   >>>>> self-heat with only a few milliwatts of power.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>> If yours is like this, you cannot replace it with a light bulb as   
   >>>>> the characteristics will be completely different.  The resistance   
   >>>>> drops as it heats up, where the resistance of a light bulb rises.   
   >>>>> The good news is that these are still made (or were until very   
   >>>>> recently) and you may find the type number of the exact part you   
   >>>>> need in the parts list for the instrument.   
   >>>>>   
   >>>>> My guess is that TH1 in your circuit is a slow-acting thermistor   
   >>>>> that compensates for thermal effects in the transistor biassing and   
   >>>>> it may look like a black resistor or a small tablet of carborundum   
   >>>>> mounted on the board with ordinary component lead-out wires.   
   >>>>   
   >>>> This one's the TSA628. I have the service manual for it, but it only   
   >>>> quotes Venner part numbers for all devices listed and "R23" for the   
   >>>> type/ value of this thermistor. I don't think either of those numbers   
   >>>> would be of much use today. TH1 is "Type R52" so while they appear   
   >>>> identical, it seems they aren't.   
   >>>> TH1 and TH2 both *appear* identical: glass encapsulations about an   
   >>>> inch long by 3/8 wide at a guess. They're juxtaposed together on the   
   >>>> board. I'm guessing - it is only a guess - that TH2 (the failed one)   
   >>>> functioned as some sort of AGC to stabilise the amplitude of the   
   >>>> oscillator and the TH1 was the actual Wein-Bridge element as is   
   >>>> commonly understood in this type of oscillator. That would account   
   >>>> for why - as Phil Hobbs observed - the gain has gone up enough to run   
   >>>> the output into the supply rails and give rise to the distortion I'm   
   >>>> seeing.   
   >>>   
   >>>   
   >>> My guess is type R23 is 2kohm at room temp (the R53/RA53 beloved by   
   >>> hobbyists in the 1960s/70s was 5k). eBay probably has some close   
   >>> enough (1.5k to 3.3k at room temp?) replacements.   
   >>>   
   >>> This link might help you:   
   >>>   
   >>> > Old_STC_Thermistors.pdf?   
   rlkey=jozht29aj1u6ocxnmw8okedrq&st=ohzxz0mw&raw=1>   
   >>>   
   >>> piglet   
   >>   
   >> Thanks for the info, Erich; much useful info in that datasheet.   
   >> Nothing showing up on Ebay at the moment, but I'm making enquiries of   
   >> vintage parts sellers which hopefully might bear some fruit. Failing   
   >> that I'll just have to build a new oscillator stage from scratch using   
   >> a spare vacuum thermistor from my parts bin.   
   >   
   > I saw a seller with Littelfuse GL202F9J which might do electrically if   
   > maybe a bit slow thermally? That part is also available from Mouser.   
   >   
   > piglet   
      
   According to the datasheet, this device boasts "a fast thermal response   
   time" but doesn't quantify that. It could do the trick with a bit of bias   
   tweaking.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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