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Thanks Richard.....
"Richard Edwards" wrote in message ... On Mon, 5 Jan 2004 22:55:01 -0000, "k" wrote: Could anyone in the group advise on the pin-out wiring for the main handset to the Seavoice RT660 vhf radio? It's a telephone type handset with mike, earpiece and PTT combined. 6 wires (2 red on PTT, 2 black on mouthpiece/mic and 2 white to the earpiece/phone speaker) Could be simple, but the 6 wires run to a 5 pin plug, so at least 1 pair will be commoned, I presume. Trial and error could run it down, but I may fry the rig in that process. Any help on which colours to connect to which pins on the plug would be greatly appreciated. Also any advice on how best to solder this lot as the pins are tiny, the multicore wires are very thin and the insulating sleeves melt with the soldering iron a meter away! Constructive comments/help greatly appreciated please....Keith Sorry cannot help with pin outs (wot goes where). How did you get to point where plug is separate from lead with no indication of what wires went where? Well, your right, I should have taken more care when I desoldered the partly damaged assembly. I took a note of the pin-out, but have misplaced it...The difficulty in working by trial and error is that if the TX relay is triggered without the RX side of the TCVR being isolated (like the PTT switch does), then the whole RX side of the set can just get fried (I think!) As a general statements when soldering to small plugs. 1 strip and each wire back about 5mm 2 If two wires go to one pin twist them together 3 Tin each wire. Use a temp controlled soldering iron if possible. 50wat temp controlled far better than a cheap 15w non controlled. 4 cut off each wire so that 1-2 mm of tinned uninsulated wire shows 5 assemble connector hood components onto cable 6 place sleeve over each wire. wires should be as long as possible but still allow hood to cover. Some bunching of wires under hood when assembled is possible. 7 Get hold of a mating socket to the plug. Clamp socket in a vice, insert plug to socket. You now have a solid work area with the socket acting as a heat sink and retaining the alignment of the plug pins. 8 Using a fine tip bit, tin each pin solder bucket We're on the same wavelength to this point. - the difficulty seems to be that the 6 signal wires in the mutlicore lead are very fine copper spiral wound along what appears to be a soft plastic core which melts when the copper outer spiral is heated. Very flexible, but almost impossible to 'tin' before making the join. I think this multicore is some kind of P.O. spec cable and someone has suggested it's designed for srimp connecting, not soldering. I can't see how I could crimp up such fine wires into tiny pins on the plug. Brain surgery would be easier! Maybe easier to replace the whole curly lead with less flexible plain copper wire multi? 9 Solder each wire to the appropriate pin. With tinned well and tinned wires it will take a second or so each. Work from inside pins to outside. 10 Inspect and ensure all ok 11 Slide sleeves down wires 12 Hot air to shrink if heat shrink sleeves. 13 Fit shroud 14 Plug into R/T 15 Test I'll be happy to get here by the spring and boating by the summer! 16 Go boating Richard Nb "Pound Eater" Parkend G+S Many thanks for your detailed guidance. Cheers.....keith |
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