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Cobra148gtl final&bias


do you have it on miliamps DC area on the meter.. also check inside the unit most have a fuse that will blow if you go above what it is rated at. mine goes to 200ma and if I go higher it will blow the fuse. not sure what the 13 you have posted.
to make sure you are doing it right you unplug the wire at the test point then put neg to one contact and the other wire to the other end. then key the mic. one wire is for the driver bias and the other wire is for the final bias. the wire that runs towards the driver is the driver bias ans the wire that goes closer to the final is for the final bias.
 
Just be sure the radio is set to either sideband mode. Should not matter whether it's USB or LSB. The mike gain must be at zero so that room noises won't affect the reading.

I will always take BOTH jumper wires loose while making this measurement. Any trace of carrier leakage from the driver transistor can change the current reading on the final transistor.

This particular measurement gives a lot of folks trouble. More than once we find that the current-range fuse in a meter has blown. Typically because one of the meter's probes came loose and touched exposed grounded metal. Most meters use a fast-blow fuse to protect the "mA" input.

Got in the habit of using the 10-Amp range of the multimeter. The correct readings will look like "0.060", but the fuse on that range won't blow if a probe briefly gets loose and brushes against the chassis.

73
 
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Nomad; you da man!

Quick viddy for biasing the 148:



EDIT:
What happened in that viddy when the meter started beeping was that the driver biasing VR was dirty and wouldn't adjust. So I gave it a spritz of Deoxit cleaner; turned a few times and then adjusted it. Old VR's will have these issues from time to time. Best to give them all a spritz when reconditioning a radio.
 
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kaos:

That meter - sad to say - has a limit of 100mA. Problem is - is that a driver or final VR will change greater than that. What happens if the bias circuit of the radio under test is waay out of adjustment - like @ 350mA? Well; it will peg that needle and possibly burn that meter.

The real issue to solve your dilemma has already been pointed out by Nomad. There are two fuses inside any meter. One is for the 10A current test and the other is for the mA current test. It is not uncommon for a newbee to to accidentally pop the mA fuse in your meter. Done it a few times myself.

" . . .This particular measurement gives a lot of folks trouble. More than once we find that the current-range fuse in a meter has blown. Typically because one of the meter's probes came loose and touched exposed grounded metal. Most meters use a fast-blow fuse to protect the "mA" input.

Got in the habit of using the 10-Amp range of the multimeter. The correct readings will look like "0.060", but the fuse on that range won't blow if a probe briefly gets loose and brushes against the chassis. . ." (Nomad)


That's sound advice. I suggest that you find a way to test the mA fuse (the smaller of the two fuses) and get on with using your meter. They are best because they have a much greater range than the meter you just bought - sad to say.

Don't look at all of this as all bad; look at it all and treat it all as a learning experience that will widen your own mental database as you strive to work on radios. We are all pulling for ya to that end. Cut yourself some slack, as making mistakes is usually the best way to learn.

Robb
 
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