Well, the ‘Franken-Roberts’ lives, found some NOS displays that I bought years ago, because they were cheap 😀 Anyway, fitted one (after finally finding a manufacturers pdf of both displays) and bingo, it’s alive.
Repaired the psu and I think I’ll relegate it to the workshop as a background noise machine. Another job, jobbed.
Sorting out a box of valves, to try and find something, To my surprise, underneath the box I found a Sony Diskman. Even though I worked for Sony, I never actually owned one.
Honestly don’t remember ever seeing it before. Must’ve been in with the valves, and got overlooked. It had 20-year-old alkaline batteries in it, which had leaked all over the place.
Miraculously the leakage had missed the circuitboard.
Lots of cleaning up with vinegar, the contacts were back to almost perfect.
Lots of polish, plastic polish and a service and all is well again.
I’m quite pleased I now own a minty one by accident. 🙂
This one’s a bit poorly, and is suffering from the usual dodgy capacitor problem. However, it’s in a lovely condition so be ashamed to let it die.
The little round silver things are the capacitors, and are directly soldered onto the circuit board, they are filled with fish oil, yes you heard it right, fish oil, and unfortunately this leaks all over the board when these go faulty.
So, its a case of removing each one individually with two soldering irons, and then replacing them with quality replacements. This is not a job for the fainthearted, as if you try to twist these capacitors off on this type of board, you’ll damage it because the traces just lift off straightaway. Be warned, these circuit boards are very delicate.
So, the cheap ultrasonic cleaner wasn’t great from the start, it would take about five minutes to start up and when it did it was like a mouse fart. It worked for a while and was useful in it’s own way.
In the mean time I bought a larger capacity one and took this home for small jobs.
So now comes the time i need it to clean up some parts and it fails completely. Poop.
After taking it apart, it seems they are quite well made for the money, everything is shielded in the right places and ground points are well attached etc.
The ultrasonic transducer was toast, probably not that great from the start, but there you go. Also the resistors between the Base and Collector of the driver transistors were charcoal.
Which left me in a bit of a dilemma. What were the values? There was nothing on the internet and the company hadn’t lasted long enough to complain, let alone get any information from.
Then a thought popped into my head, I wonder if the other ultrasonic cleaner had a similar drive board in it. A week goes by and a trip to workshop one was overdue. To my relief, the other ultrasonic cleaner had the same board, and being a much later version had some modified and upgraded parts too.
Anyway, checked everything else was ok, which it was, fitted some new resistors, and ordered a new transducer. The ones fitted in this range are 40khz @ 60watts. Just for reference.
So that’s how far I have gotten with this so far. I will have to wait for the new transducer to turn up and see how things go. Watch this space…
..or moreover, the lack of therein. Roberts radio’s seem to have particular propensity to losing these things at an alarming pace. And I have a significant amount of radios that require them. So I decided to make some…
I had to make former to place them on to finish off the surface on the top, but I think they finished up looking rather nice.
Ok, so not so long ago, there was a breach of security, a virus was uploaded to the server, and I lost the whole website. A bit of a day wrecker. Anyway, never mind, I’ll go get the backup drive, nope, that had died too.
So, up until now all of the posts were lost, that was, until now. I bought a box full of bits and bobs, and in with it all was a hard drive of the same model of my dead one.
A few chip swops later and I have a mostly working backup drive. It has massive corruption, (probably due to the original failure) but I have been successful in reconstructing lots of the lost entries from the past. So, from time to time more and more older posts will appear here when I have reconstructed them. Yay.
Just another quick post today, a strip, clean (in the cleaning machine), rebuild and re-oil of this Longines Swiss quartz watch with an old ETA movement, plus a new battery and then a timing setup.
Above – before the calibration. One second fast a day.