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Ham Radio CD-ROM (Emerald Software) (1995).ISO
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pro34
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1991-10-22
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REALISTIC PRO34 MODS & INFO
"NOVICE NOTES" FOR PRO-34 MODIFICATIONS
1. Remove the 4 small phillips scres on the back of the unit
2. Remove the batter cover and battery holder from the case.
3. Remove the two knobs on the top of the case (Volume & Squelch)
4. The Case has some pressure fit points, These are at the bottom of
the case and you need to be a bit careful in forcing the two halves
of the case shell appart. Once you have the pressure fit points
at the bottom released, angle up the bottom of the case until
the battery sepperation wall is clear of the internal metal frame, and
slide towards the top of the unit, place the back half of the shell aside.
5. Now you will see the RF boad mounted to the metal support frame, The
BNC (antenna) conector leads and the volume control power switch leads
are soldered directly to the board. Carefully desolder these 4 connections.
6. At the bottom of the RF board there is a IF Can transformer that has a small
wire as a groundign strap soldered directly to it. Desolder this as well.
7. There will be some wires from the volume controle knob to the PC board that
are socketed. Remove the plug from the ~F board (needle nose pliers work)
8. There will also be a similar wire (small sheilded ) from the squelch control
to the RF board wich is also Socketed. Remove the plug from the RF board.
(Again Needle Nose Pliers work good here)
9. Remove the 4 thredded stand-offs from the RF Board (these Hold the RF board to
the internal mettal frame and are where the screws that hold the back of the
case on go.) Use a nut driver or Needle Nose Pliers.
10. Now there the RF board is mostly free. The only thing holding it in is the row
of connector pins on its botom side that plug into the logic board. You will
need to pry this board up gently. Be warned that the bottom side of the RF
board is just chock full of Very Small surface mounted omponents. So use
something non-metalic and smooth to do the prying with.
11. Now that you have removed the RF board, place it along with the case shell back
12. The Internal Metal support frame is now exposed. there are 3 small phillips
screws holding the mettal frame to the bottom Logic board (actually, these
screws go through the logic board and into the front half of the case.)
2 of the screws are near the top, and 1 is at the bottom of the metal frame.
remove these 3 screws.
13. There is a small socketed wire that leads from the small power pc board on the
metal frame that goes under it and is pluged into the Logic board. Lift
the metal frame up and remove the power plug from the PC board. Place the
metal frame with|the rest of your parts pile.
14. You are have the component side of the Logig board exposed now. There are
2 small phillips screws at the bottom of the PC board (where the Battery
compartment WAS) Remove them.
15. Once you have the the last 2 screw removed the Logic board is free. The
speaker wires lead from the speaker to the logic board on the bottom side.
These are soldered in but there is enough play in them to allow you to
make the mods.
16. NOTE: The keyboard lock switch is a funky little piece of plastic with
a sliding stainless metal contactor that is just wedged inbetween the
front case and the logic board. Remove both the switch contacts and the
plastic switch. (best know it now or loose them in the carpet)
17. On the component side of the PC board you will see lots of nifty surface
mounted compone~ts, a fat little barrel capacitor (used for maintaining the
channel freqs while you change the batteries.. and make modifications :)
near the edge of the PC board you will see a couple of small diodes moutned
vertically. These will be labeled on the PC board as D10 and D11, you will
also see a place for another diaode to be soldered in but was not
installed at the factory.. this is D9.
18. You must now move diode D11 to the place where D9 is labled. As you have
probably noticed by now there is a tin cover over about 1/2rd of the
PC boards solder side. The edge of the tin cover nearest the diodes has
2 metal tabs soldered to the P board. Desolder these 2 tabs and gently
bend the metal cover way from the soder side of the PC board. This will
expose the board enough to let you get your soldering iron in to where
the diode leads are.
19. Desolder the D11 diode from the bottom while pulling it away from the board
on the top of the board using neadle nose pliers on the LEAD only.
20. Now heat up the D9 solder pads and insert the diode (the same way it was
oriented in the D11 location)
You Have Completed the Mods for complete 800mhz band coverage and 66-88mhz band
coverage.
*******************************************************************
Subject: Eliminating a birdie in the PRO-34 portable scanner
by Bob Parnass, AJ9S
Birdies are unwanted signals generated within a receiver, which
cause the receiver to "hear itself." Some birdies are caused by the
unwanted product of the local oscillator. Another cause is
a stage, which oscillates but isn't meant to oscillate, such as a
high gain intermediate frequency (IF) amplifier.
Most birdies, especially those generated by a local
oscillator, are frequency stable. It's difficult to rid a radio of
these birdies, and solutions usually involve better internal
shielding and isolation among the stages.
A "wandering birdie" is one which changes frequency. Wandering
birdies, and birdies which appear and disappear suddenly, may be
caused by intermittent ground connections within the radio, or
defective bypass capacitors.
After using his Radio ShackO PRO-34 portable scanner for a few
months, Ron Smithberg, a radio hobbyist in Joliet, was hampered by a
"wandering birdie." Ron's scanner was hearing itself on a few
frequencies in the VHF-Hi range, but the birdie disappeared when he
tilted the radio or squeezed the case. There had been no
problem when the scanner was purchased initially.
I suggested that a ground connection or a circuit board in his
PRO-34 might be loose. The thin PRO-34 plastic case feels chintzy,
and can flex easily by applying just a gentle squeeze. After
prolonged use, the case motion can loosen screws which were once
tight.
Ron disassembled his PRO-34. He unfastened the helical antenna,
knobs, and rear screws, then gingerly removed the plastic case.
After Ron tightened a Phillips screw holding the Logic Board
to the front of the case, the birdie disappeared forever!
The operation took a steady hand. Although he didn't have to
remove any boards, Ron warned that accessing the offending screw was
a challenge. He used a very small Phillips screwdriver,
positioned through a hole in a shield partition.
***********************************************************
Restoration of Cellular Frequency Coverage on
Radio Shack PRO-34 Handheld Scanner
1. Remove battery cover and battery, four black screws on
rear cover, and volume and squelch knobs.
2. Remove rear cover, lifting back and up to clear controls. Do not
remove belt clip or circuit board screws.
3. Unplug the brown volume control connector (grn/yel/blk) and white
squelch control connector (wht/blk/red) from the linear circuit board.
4. Unsolder the ground lead from T111 (at corner of linear circuit board
above the external power connectors). Unsolder the two power switch leads
from the back of the volume control. Unsolder the antenna connector center
pin and ground wires from the linear circuit board.
5. Unscrew the four combination screws that hold the linear circuit board and
received the back cover screws. Grasp the linear board at the top and lift it
straight away from the front case, unplugging the 16-pin connector.
6. Remove the three screws holding the metal frame assembly which held the
linear board to the front panel. Unplug the red-black power lead and lay the
frame aside. It is still connected to the battery contacts.
7. Locate diodes D9 - D12 on the volume control side of the of the logic
circuit board under T1; D10 and D11 are marked. Clip one lead of D11,
separating the gap. This may be resoldered later if desired.
8. Reassemble the board by reversing the disassembly procedures above.
pro34.14
Date: 4 Apr 89 14:24:01 GMT
Subject: PRO-34 Scanner Modifications
In the May 1989 edition of Popular Communications is a
"Letter to the Editor" on the Radio Shack PRO-34 Scanner. Below
is the text of that letter.
PRO-34 Scanner Modification
In regard to the information presented (March Issue) on the
handheld Radio Shack PRO-34 scanner, my own observations on the
modifications have been:
1. To restore missing 800 MHz frequencies, remove D-11.
2. To add 66 to 88 MHz (European Coverage), install a diode at
D-9.
3. D-10 must remain in place for full 800 MHz coverage.
4. If a diode is added at D-13 it cuts out aero band, also seems
to affect 800 MHz channel spacing.
5. D-12 added dosen't seem to have any affect.
6. Only D-10 and D-11 are factory installed.