AM Radio Problem
AM Radio Problem
'61 starfire with stock AM radio with front and rear speaker was working fine then the speakers got a lot of static and this got very loud regardless of the volume and then the radio died. Fuse was blown, so I put in a new one and with out any static in the speakers the fuse blew once again.
Any ideas if this can be an internal radio electronics issue... If it is I may just live without an operating radio.
Any ideas if this can be an internal radio electronics issue... If it is I may just live without an operating radio.
'61 starfire with stock AM radio with front and rear speaker was working fine then the speakers got a lot of static and this got very loud regardless of the volume and then the radio died. Fuse was blown, so I put in a new one and with out any static in the speakers the fuse blew once again.
Any ideas if this can be an internal radio electronics issue... If it is I may just live without an operating radio.
Any ideas if this can be an internal radio electronics issue... If it is I may just live without an operating radio.
Romoval will have to wait for warmer weather at this point. The circuit is only for the radio. Fuse will blow once radio is turned on.
I was wondering if a failure in the radio electronics would cause a fuse to blow like this, seems like a poor electronics design if in fact that is the root cause. Could a speaker go bad and cause this?
I was wondering if a failure in the radio electronics would cause a fuse to blow like this, seems like a poor electronics design if in fact that is the root cause. Could a speaker go bad and cause this?
Romoval will have to wait for warmer weather at this point. The circuit is only for the radio. Fuse will blow once radio is turned on.
I was wondering if a failure in the radio electronics would cause a fuse to blow like this, seems like a poor electronics design if in fact that is the root cause. Could a speaker go bad and cause this?
I was wondering if a failure in the radio electronics would cause a fuse to blow like this, seems like a poor electronics design if in fact that is the root cause. Could a speaker go bad and cause this?
It wouldn't be poor design, it would be age. Something is shorted inside the radio, since the car/radio is 46 years old it most likely has some wiring that is cloth covered. They did that a lot then. The cloth has deteriorated or some creature has eaten at it and you may have a short that way. Or, one of the electronic items may have shorted, electrolytic caps dry out and sometimes they short instead of open. Best bet, have it repaired or replace it.
In 61/62 there was a transition from tubes to transistors and thrown in
were some hybrids with both tubes and transistors. (my 62 Pont.Tempest
had a transistor type, my 62 Olds F85 has tubes) go figure...
So, Is your radio - tube (takes a minute or so to warm up and play or
instantly on and playing) - transistor ? - well at least when it worked
*******
The problem could even be caused by vibration over the years having
worn thru the insulation on a speaker wire and it is shorting to the floor
pan somewhere ??? You MIGHT even be lucky and fixing the short will
fix the WHOLE problem and -no- radio repair will be necessary....
*******
Otherwise:
If transistor most likely the output transistor has gone (as OldsGuy said
46 years is a LONG time).
If tubes the vibrator has probably shorted - again 46 yrs.....
Either of these failures would take a fuse in a nanosec
Someday I might need -this- information - IS there still anyone out
there that works on old radios???
kevinkpk - could you pm me the link to the clock repair place. (Hoping
they might have one for sale.)
were some hybrids with both tubes and transistors. (my 62 Pont.Tempest
had a transistor type, my 62 Olds F85 has tubes) go figure...
So, Is your radio - tube (takes a minute or so to warm up and play or
instantly on and playing) - transistor ? - well at least when it worked

*******
The problem could even be caused by vibration over the years having
worn thru the insulation on a speaker wire and it is shorting to the floor
pan somewhere ??? You MIGHT even be lucky and fixing the short will
fix the WHOLE problem and -no- radio repair will be necessary....
*******
Otherwise:
If transistor most likely the output transistor has gone (as OldsGuy said
46 years is a LONG time).
If tubes the vibrator has probably shorted - again 46 yrs.....
Either of these failures would take a fuse in a nanosec

Someday I might need -this- information - IS there still anyone out
there that works on old radios???
kevinkpk - could you pm me the link to the clock repair place. (Hoping
they might have one for sale.)
There are still people that work on the old stuff. You might find some people in surprising places by searching on the internet. A lot of the old tube stuff is coming from ex-Soviet Union countries. I saw a video on the internet of a guy building his on tube type triode, from scratch including the tube itself. He had all the equipment, probable from a defunct factory in the old east block.
Thanks Barneyo for the info, yes it goes on after a min. of so when it worked. I really don't feel like even getting involved in removing it for repair.
It is only AM and when we go out in the car my 6 year old brings her small AM FM transistor with her anyway so I am not sure it is worth my agrivation to R/I the original radio. Funny I still have to tell her to lower the radio even with that small speaker.
It is only AM and when we go out in the car my 6 year old brings her small AM FM transistor with her anyway so I am not sure it is worth my agrivation to R/I the original radio. Funny I still have to tell her to lower the radio even with that small speaker.
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