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FM Exciter Modifications and Repairs
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If you think about it, an FM exciter is a transmitter. All it needs is a
power amplifier to get RF to a desired level. That makes the exciter a vital
link in the broadcast chain. An exciter is a bit complex in how an RF carrier is
created and how audio impressed on it, but it’s not rocket science.
I see exciters in the shop that suffer
various ills, almost all of them taking a station off the air. Here’s a grab
bag of mods and repairs that may help you in future.
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A Harris MX-15 exciter
is shown on the testing bench.
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One of the modifications I like to make
to exciters is to add a power control on the front panel. I’ve had enough of
poking a jeweler’s screwdriver through a hole in the top of an exciter to make
an adjustment. Many transmitter tune-ups involve tweaking exciter power to get
things just right. A control with a knob makes that job so much easier.
I also like to add a screwdriver-adjustable
composite input level control on the rear so modulation can be adjusted easily.
The Harris THE-1 FM exciter has an
output RF amplifier that can fail. Repairing it could be an expensive job, because
the original manufacturer of the RF transistors is out of business. There
appears to be no substitute for them. Harris has just a few complete working
amplifier modules on hand at $2,128 each. Ouch! The exciter isn’t worth that
when operational. I was faced with this dilemma recently and discovered an
answer. It is the FM70 pallet amplifier for about $150 from Broadcast Concepts
in Miami.
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Power control knob as
added to MX-15 exciter
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(click thumbnail)
Original PA module in
THE-1 exciter
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By cutting away part of the existing
amplifier circuit card carefully and bolting this replacement amplifier in
place, I was able to revive two THE-1 exciters. Wiring has to be reworked too. The
existing RF output low-pass filter was probably responsible for the transistor
failure in the first place. With an exciter terminated into a dummy load, a
return loss measurement at the input to the filter showed about 8 dB, when it
should have been at least 20 dB. Retuning the filter was the fix.
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Revised THE-1 module
being tested with return loss bridge
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In the end, the exciter did not put out
its rated 55 watts but topped out at 30 to 40 watts depending on which end of
the FM band it was on. There wasn’t enough gain in the design to get full
power. Most stations don’t need that kind of power anyway. Ten watts is pretty
standard especially for tube transmitters.
Protection
Speaking of tubes, any solid-state
exciter that feeds the tube input stage on a transmitter needs to be protected
by a shorted quarter-wave stub. An arc-over in that tube could put 1,000 volts
on the output transistor of an exciter, causing an immediate failure. Continental
Electronics has recommended these devices highly for years.
You can build one by shorting a piece
of coaxial cable at one-quarter wavelength from a “T” adapter on the output of
the exciter or input to the transmitter. The difficult part is getting the
length right so the exciter sees no VSWR when the stub is in the circuit. I do
that in the shop by using a spectrum analyzer with tracking generator and a
return loss bridge. It’s amazing how the right test equipment makes almost any
job easy.
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DIP switches accessed
through new hole in cover
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Many exciters are kept in standby
status so they can be put on any frequency at a moment’s notice to substitute
for a failed exciter. Almost every exciter that comes into the shop here gets a
new set of DIP switches for frequency selection. That means putting switches in
place of wire jumpers or replacing existing switches, which may fail after 20
years of service.
In the case of a Harris MS-15 or MX-15,
I cut a rectangular hole in the AFC module cover so the switch positions can be
changed easily without taking the cover off. Caution: Anyone setting up an
exciter with switches needs to put it into a dummy load and frequency counter
on a sample port before attempting to put it in service. There is always a chance
that the switches may be set incorrectly and the exciter is playing merrily on
the wrong frequency. I’ve seen that before, and the transmitter doesn’t tune
with beans.
Many exciters show up in the shop here
with the complaint that the station is being heard on three or more spots on
the FM dial. Management likes the idea, the FCC doesn’t.
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MX-15 PA module with
replacement capacitors
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The problem usually is a dried-out
electrolytic bypass capacitor or two in the RF power amplifier stage of the
exciter although I have seen it happen in the modulated oscillator section and
power supply. Basically any oscillation, typically in the 100 kHz to 1.5 MHz
range, will modulate the exciter’s signal to appear above and below the
assigned frequency by that amount. Keeping the spectrum clean is an ongoing job
for broadcast engineers.
Findmore Tech Tips under
the News & Technology tab at radioworld.com.
Mark Persons WØMH is certified by the Society of
Broadcast Engineers as a Professional Broadcast Engineer and has more than 30
years experience. His website is www.mwpersons.com.
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