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noisebox
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Post subject: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Wed 04, 2012 9:03 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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I'm in the process of getting this Eico 221 VTVM working again. Schematic: http://www.stevenjohnson.com/manuals/mfiles/eico221.pdfI replaced the electrolytics and paper caps but left the maroon caps that look like the orange drops. The problem; I can't get it to zero out on step B of the calibration procedure. The meter tacks to the left. The internal battery is new. Here are some voltages B+ coming out of pin 8 of the 6X 5 is 296v 6SN7 pin voltages 2=109v 3=4.5v 4=.8v 5=109v 6=4.7 heater voltages ok 6H6 voltages 4=.7v 5=neg.5v heater voltages ok Any ideas? Thanks, Ben
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Johnnysan
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Wed 04, 2012 10:50 pm |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 11441 Location: Albuquerque, NM 87123
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Try a new 6SN7, and test all the resistors around that tube.
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Thu 05, 2012 6:49 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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I swapped the 6SN7 with a known good one. Still the same. I'll be checking resistors etc asap.
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Philco Don
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Thu 05, 2012 6:58 pm |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 657 Location: Littleton, CO USA
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If Johnnysan's suggestion does not fix it, start by grounding both 6SN7 grids and try to zero. If it will not, check the 1K cathode resistors. That leaves nothing else in the circuit except the 6SN7.
If it does zero with both grids grounded, then ground pin 4 only and try to zero. If it does, then some voltage is sneaking in through the switching circuits. That may be a miswire or dirt/corrosion on the switches. The plates are tied together so no imbalance can occur there.
Don
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Thu 05, 2012 7:34 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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Question: should the grid, pin 4, be a slight negative voltage? Also, on the schematic there is no pin number for the other side of the grid. Is it also pin 4? Ben
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Philco Don
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Thu 05, 2012 7:53 pm |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 657 Location: Littleton, CO USA
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Pin four should be close to ground. There may be some slight negative voltage at same potential as pin one. Pin one is the other grid.
Pin 1 is grounded through a 5 meg so it may have a half volt or so, contact potential. Same for pin 4 since it is grounded through the divider network, about 11 meg including the series grid resistor. If the instrument works correctly, the range switch position will not affect the meter zero.
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Thu 05, 2012 8:36 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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Right now the range selector makes the needle swing pretty wildly. I have used DeOxit on all contacts but haven't checked wiring against the schematic. From the looks of it this one was a kit built.
Those maroon colored caps--should they be replaced? They look like the newer orange drops. Ben
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Philco Don
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Thu 05, 2012 9:56 pm |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 657 Location: Littleton, CO USA
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Forget the caps for now.
If the range switch affects the meter, something is miswired.
Ground 6SN7 pin 4, set to zero and go through the ranges and functions to confirm.
Then check all the wiring. Since it was a kit, that is most likely.
Don
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Thu 05, 2012 10:59 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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Thanks for the info. I won't be able to try it until after work today. The DC/Ohms test probe shows it should have a 15M resistor in series with it. I've noticed a lot of test probes on test gear have this or recommend a cap in line with the lead. Why aren't they just built in? If I use the meter without this will it hurt it? Just some noob questions.
I've been staring at the schematic, which I thought was complicated at first. It's actually pretty simple compared to a superhet schematic. Now I really need to study the math. I have a huge mental block with that, but it kills me not knowing more about circuits and understanding the math is important. Ben
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Philco Don
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Fri 06, 2012 3:38 am |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 657 Location: Littleton, CO USA
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The resistor is in the probe to provide isolation from the circuit under test. The circuit will not see probe capacity and load a sensitive circuit. The probe is shielded to prevent acting as an antenna for stray AC and RF voltages.
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Fri 06, 2012 3:49 am |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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Thanks Don! The suprising thing is that I understand what you said. Four years of banging my head against the wall with this subject might be paying off...
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Fri 06, 2012 5:04 am |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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Grounding pin 4 makes it so I can adjust to zero on all ranges and settings. I will check and replace resistors. Thanks for the help! Ben
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Philco Don
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Fri 06, 2012 5:28 pm |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 657 Location: Littleton, CO USA
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I do not believe replacing parts alone will solve the problem. There is some voltage on pin 4 that should not be there. It is most likely coming from a miswire, not a defective part. Carefully check the wiring according to the schematic. Also look for solder globs and shorts on the switches and the 6SN7 socket.
You can try working back from 6SN7, pin 4, by grounding the resistor divider at various points until you get to the test probe. The meter will return to zero until you get one step past the trouble spot.
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Fri 06, 2012 8:29 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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The kit was put together pretty clean --no globs of solder anywhere--so I don't think its that. Could you explain in more simple terms how to trace back from pin 4 to the source of the stray voltage? I'm not sure where the resistor divider is. Also, since the tube sockets are phenolic, could there be enough of a carbon track to be causing this? Ben
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Sat 07, 2012 9:18 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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I was playing with grounding the grid of the 6SN7 last night and found something interesting. When grounded, the needle zeros fine through all ranges and selections. I removed the jumper while still powered up and the needle still zeroed. I repeated to make sure what I was seeing was right and the results were the same with the exception that when ohms was selected the needle went erratic again.
I'm still trying to understand how to find the offending component. Ben
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K7MCG
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Sat 07, 2012 10:04 pm |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 2038 Location: Seattle WA US
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Ben- To zero the ohms scale, you need a good battery, inserted with the correct polarity, and need to have your test leads shorted together. If you have a single test lead with a switch, the switch needs to be set to AC/Ohms, not to DC. Set the zero with the leads shorted, then set the OHMS Adjust for full scale with the leads apart.
--Chuck
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MDMcCool
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Sun 08, 2012 2:28 pm |
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Joined: Jan Thu 01, 1970 1:00 am Posts: 125 Location: New Jersey, USA
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Ben-
I recently went over my 221 and was having similar problems. Turned out to be a dirty range and function switches. I had to clean them multiple times with DeOxit and scrub the contacts Q-tips. Spraying alone wasn't enough.
Matt
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noisebox
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Post subject: Re: EICO 221 VTVM restore Posted: Apr Mon 09, 2012 10:19 pm |
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Joined: Mar Mon 02, 2009 11:48 pm Posts: 2875 Location: 97381, USA
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It worked  -- at least got some good results. I'm still having zeroing problems on the first two ranges and it still won't test or zero ohms, even with a fresh battery etc, but I can zero through most settings now. I also used Deoxit in all of the pots. Any Ideas why a few of the settings are not zeroing? The rotary switch on the left was cleaned with Deoxit and Q-tips. The right hand one is what it looks like before cleaning. Attachment:
deoxit.jpg [ 81.22 KiB | Viewed 386 times ]
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