M1225 as base model...

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cduda
Posts: 200
Joined: Sun May 21, 2006 9:39 am
What radios do you own?: GP300, HT1250, CDM1250

M1225 as base model...

Post by cduda »

Hello...

I have a M1225 on a pwer supply used as a base model radio in a police station. When the user transmits, any receiving radio hears a loud HUM. The wires on the back side are slightly frayed/cracking.

Would this be the cause for the loud hum?

Any ideas/suggestions?

Thank you
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firefighter13669
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Joined: Sun Jun 24, 2007 8:09 am
What radios do you own?: M1225,F3161,F70,F5061,F33,F50V

Re: M1225 as base model...

Post by firefighter13669 »

That really could be caused by several diffrent things
KC2VHB
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whls3
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What radios do you own?: FT50,FT60, P100, Ramsey FX440

Re: M1225 as base model...

Post by whls3 »

A hum doesn't come from frayed D.C. power wires, but it should be fixed. If it shorts, it will blow the fuse or even worse blow the power supply. The first and easiest thing to try is swapping out the mic. The next easiest thing to try is swapping out the power supply if possible. A spare mic is something most people have, a spare power supply? Probably not.
Einstein, when describing radio said "Wire telegraph is like a very long cat. You pull his tail in NY and he meows in LA. And radio works the same way: you send signals here, they receive them there. The only difference is that there is no cat."
Al
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Joined: Tue Sep 04, 2001 4:00 pm

Re: M1225 as base model...

Post by Al »

If the power supply is old or has been run in 'hot' conditions i.e. no ventilation, then I'd start looking at the supply's filter capacitors. If it's a conventional linear supply similar to an Astron, usually there's one large computer grade filter that sits right across the bridge rectifier's output that could be dried out/low capacitance, but it's more likely a 100-300uF cap that filters the control section of the supply. The control sections frequently use only a single diode rectifier, half wave, so the filter sees ripple at 60 hz rather than the full wave bridge's output(120 hz) feeding the computer grade cap. If you have one, watch the supply's output with a scope under transmit load, and you'll see any ripple if it's present.
Will
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Joined: Tue Sep 04, 2001 4:00 pm

Re: M1225 as base model...

Post by Will »

Does it have the black hand mic, desk mic, or?

There are known 'hum' problems with the black hand mic, and some desk mics.
N0SIH
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Re: M1225 as base model...

Post by N0SIH »

Hello Cduda, a couple of things come to mind on the same track with the other replies. Is the power supply big enough (output amperage) for the mobil radio? We did that at our Road & Bridge offices and had to cut the power output on the radios down to 5 watts so we could use them on ElCheapo power supplies. Also the two button desk Mic had given us problems similar to what you describe in proximity to computers and large copy machines. A hand mic cured that problem.Good luck and 73 de Jeff/N0SIH
2-Moxy, 2 Maxar-80, 2 HT-50, 2 Maxtrac VHF, 3 SP-50, 2 P110, 1 GM-300,1 M-1225,
12 M-100, 10 MTX-HT,1 STX-HT, 1 Mostar, 1 Flexar repeater on UHF ham, 1 GR-300 UHF on ham, 1 GR-500 on VHF, 6 P-200 HT. Oh and a couple of crates of Micor junk too.
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