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Info on "page 75" by electronics unlimited

fastfreddie1269

New Member
Dec 9, 2025
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I have a page 75 linear and am wondering if anyone can tell me anything about it? Preamp doesn't work but everything else seems to.
 

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the pre-amp is burned out since somebody connected the RF out
from their radio to the "antenna" of that amp to see if it works
like that. it did not work, so then they started flipping switches,
and it still did not work. so then they swapped the coax cables
on the back of that amp to see if it would work that way.

now how many times have I seen this...:mad: :mad::mad::mad:
 
the pre-amp is burned out since somebody connected the RF out
from their radio to the "antenna" of that amp to see if it works
like that. it did not work, so then they started flipping switches,
and it still did not work. so then they swapped the coax cables
on the back of that amp to see if it would work that way.

now how many times have I seen this...:mad: :mad::mad::mad:
Thanks for your response. Do you know which parts are most likely bad then? Or how to go about repairing it?
 
Thanks for your response. Do you know which parts are most likely bad then? Or how to go about repairing it?
It could be the preamp transistor or a relay You need to figure that out. If you looking at the amp from the front, the preamp relay is on the left and you'll see a small transistor and a metal can that is your preamp transistor.
 
Biggest single assassin of the preamp is the SSB switch. Sooner or later someone keys it with that switch on. When you key the mike with that switch off, it takes the relay a short moment to wake up and move the contacts. During that moment, your transmit power is being pushed upstream the wrong way into the output of the preamp circuit. A protection diode usually absorbs this safely so long as it's really brief.

The SSB switch delays the relay from dropping out to keep it from chattering while transmitting sideband, since there's no carrier to hold the relay closed. But it also delays the relay's pull-in time. That brief burst of AM carrier is now a lot-longer burst. Usually long enough to fry the preamp transistor fairly soon. The preamp transistor will have a type number marked on it. And if you see a small glass diode next to the preamp transistor, it should get checked, or just replaced along with the transistor. They're cheap.

There's a chance that this is what keeps the preamp from working. Assuming, of course, that the 50 year-old preamp relay is working properly. You can put the amplifier in the coax line with the power off and test each relay by flicking your finger against the side of the relay. You may hear a brief interruption the receiver's noise level. Or it may just cut out and reveal a relay problem.

73
 

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