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- OLD CAR RADIOS
-
-
- You have just purchased an old car radio for a dollar or two at a yard sale.
- So, how do you go about hooking up a 12-volt supply and speaker to it, much
- less a shortwave converter kit??? What you have in front of you is the bare
- metal case of the radio with the on/off switch and tuning knob in front and
- either a bunch of colored wires or just a funny-looking connector in back.
- So, what's next?
-
- Well, you need the proper tools. Get a couple of assorted screwdrivers, both
- regular and Phillips to remove the cover from the radio. Dig out a
- voltmeter or VOM, or anything that will measure ohms (if you don't have one,
- borrow one from a friend). Fetch your trusty soldering iron and solder and
- your needle nose pliers and wire stripper/clipper. These are the basic
- tools. If you don't already have them and can't somehow get a hold of them
- then you have no business building electronics projects anyhow. A scope
- would also help speed up things, but many hobbyists can't afford one. Oh,
- yes, you will also need a small 4 - 40 ohm speaker that you salvage from a
- broken transistor radio, or some such. Most hobbyists have a half dozen of
- these lying around.
-
- You will use the ohmmeter, your power of observation, and a bit of reasoning
- and common sense to figure out what the wires or tabs coming out of the car
- radio chassis mean. You need to identify the following terminals: the power
- - +12 volts and ground, and two speaker terminals (if the radio has wiring
- for more than one speaker, which is probable, then you need to find only the
- two terminals for any ONE of the speakers).
-
- Finding the ground terminal is easiest. If there are colored wires coming
- out of the radio, the BLACK wire is the likeliest suspect. Ok, power up your
- ohm meter and clip one lead to the metal chassis of the radio. In turn test
- each wire or tab for zero ohms (or just a fraction of an ohm) resistance
- from the lead to the chassis. The only one with the zero or near-zero
- reading is the culprit - the ground lead. Label it with a small piece of
- masking tape.
-
- Locating the +12 volt terminal takes a bit more work. If there is one and
- only one red wire coming out of the radio, that is probably it, but do not
- take it for granted. Now, open up the chassis by unscrewing one or more of
- the sheet metal plates enclosing the works of the radio. You need to get
- access to the back of the volume control, which also happens to have an
- on/off switch mounted on it. Find the two terminals on the back of the
- on/off switch. Twist the volume control so the on/off switch clicks ON. Now,
- measure the resistance from either terminal on the back of this switch to
- each wire or terminal coming out of the chassis of the radio (paying
- particular attention to the RED wire, if there is one). You will read a zero
- or near-zero resistance from only one wire or terminal to the on/off switch.
- This is +12 volts. Label this wire or tab. Reinstall the metal plates on
- the chassis to close it up.
-
- The final step is to find two leads for any one speaker. You will test the
- remaining, unlabeled leads or tabs. You will now for the first time power up
- the radio. Get your 12 volt regulated power supply (the enclosed file
- POWERSUP.TXT gives details on building one if you need to do so), and attach
- the +V and GND leads to the terminals on the radio that you have labeled in
- the steps above. Carefully apply power. Turn on the on/off switch of the
- radio. If the fuse on the power supply has not blown, then you are probably
- all right.
-
- Now with your VOM on volts function, read the voltage between the chassis
- (ground) and each of the unlabeled terminals. If you read +12 v on any of
- them, this is the lead supplying juice to a power antenna accessory, and you
- will label it so and leave it alone from now on. Most or all of the leads
- should give you a low or no voltage reading to chassis ground. Fine so far.
- If you have a scope, the rest is easy. Just connect scope in turn to each
- set of two unlabeled terminals. Set the scope time scale to 200 microseconds
- per division and the volts/division to about 5. With the power on to the
- radio, look for a scope display that looks like an audio signal (scrambled
- sine waves of various amplitudes). Sets of two terminals giving this display
- are likely suspects of being speaker terminals. Continue with tests below.
-
- If you can't get a scope or do not know how to use one, that is o.k. You
- will now use that old minispeaker mentioned above. With the power on to the
- radio, clip to the speaker leads (using alligator clip terminated test leads
- if you have them, if not, just plain old wires with the ends bared and
- crimped as necessary with needle nose pliers) each set of two radio terminals
- you want to test. For each test turn the radio volume up and tune the dial a
- bit. You will very soon find a set of terminals that works. If you had
- happened to hook up one terminal for each of two different speakers, you will
- get weird broken up sounds or other strange behavior. Test all the unlabeled
- terminals and you will find the pairs that sound best. These sets are
- intended to go to the same speaker.
-
- Now, assuming that you have not blown out the speaker (unlikely if you
- carefully! followed the instructions above), you can permanently connect the
- speaker to the terminals you found, or you can hook up a better speaker that
- you have been saving for the purpose, if that is the case.
-
- That all for this stage. Now on to building and installing the shortwave
- converter.
-