Author Topic: Please help in identifying this large resistor - RCA Victor Model TRR-8 MARKVIII  (Read 1721 times)

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Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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New to the forum and to projects. I believe the schematic shows the largest resistor in the picture to be 1200 ohm, 2W

Does this appear to be the case? Thanks in advance.
 

Offline Chappy425

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That is a 1200ohm resistor and it probably the one.  With a piece of equipment that old you may find more help on the following forum:

Antiqueradios.com

 
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Online wraper

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1.2k 10% carbon crap. These resistors tend to change resistance a lot, especially at presence of high moisture.
 
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Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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Thank you. I will certainly check out the site recommended!
 

Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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I see. Any recommendation on replacements?
 

Offline Nusa

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You might find this useful in interpreting resistor color bands: https://www.allaboutcircuits.com/tools/resistor-color-code-calculator/
Wattage is more of a size thing...bigger resistors of the same type are generally higher wattage.

Why do you want to replace it? Do you have some indication that its failed?
 
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Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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Thank you!
 

Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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Soldered near the resistor causing bubbling on the silver band. Not checked with meter yet.
 

Offline George Edmonds

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Hi

Certainty is a 1.2K and comparing it's size  to the IO octal tube base it is about 2W. These old carbon resistors go high in value with applied voltage.

George G6HIG
 
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Online coromonadalix

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yep  1.2k ohms   10%  2 watts  at least 1 watt  for sure
 
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Offline Gyro

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I'd suggest replacing it with a 3W resistor, it will have about the same body size. Modern resistors tend to have smaller body size and run at higher surface and lead temperatures. As it seems to be wired between two caps, you don't want to conduct too much heat into their terminals. Carbon Composition had (have) a very good surge capability too.
Best Regards, Chris
 
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Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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Thank you for the great suggestion! Another newbie question- What is the left to right orientation of this resistor? or any resistor for that matter?
 

Offline Connecteur

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I might be soft in the head, but why would you need help to measure it with an ohmmeter?
 

Offline drussell

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I might be soft in the head, but why would you need help to measure it with an ohmmeter?

I think the OP was trying to verify that it is supposed to be 1200 ohms, 2W.

Measuring an old carbon comp resistor with a meter doesn't tell you what it's value is supposed to be.

After many, many years of drift, old carbon comps will often measure anything from in this case, say, about 1100 ohms to about 5k.  They usually don't go completely open, but will often drift (usually) upwards anywhere from mildly outside tolerance all the way to sometimes several times their original value...
 
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Offline Nusa

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That said, old resistors are far more durable than old capacitors. If you still have original capacitors in that thing, they deserve to be checked first. Especially if you're trying to make a non-working unit work. Tubes, and I presume you have at least one, tend not to be affected much by simple age, and are probably as good as they were the last time the unit was used.
« Last Edit: September 08, 2020, 07:57:30 pm by Nusa »
 
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Offline drussell

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Thank you for the great suggestion! Another newbie question- What is the left to right orientation of this resistor? or any resistor for that matter?

Polarity doesn't matter with resistors.

That said, old resistors are far more durable than old capacitors.

Yes, indeed and, especially in tube equipment, resistors that have drifted upwards in value, even to several times their original value, will seldom make the apparatus totally not work.  It may not work well, but it will usually at least do something.

Quote
If you still have original capacitors in that thing, they deserve to be checked first. Especially if you're trying to make a non-working unit work.

Yes, most certainly!  Old capacitors are often bad to the point of causing something to not work at all or even cause severe, permanent damage like burning out an otherwise good transformer winding or blowing up rectifiers, simply due to a shorted capacitor. 

The OP should also note that many types of capacitors are polarized, so you need to be careful with those to be sure you get them the right way around when it matters, but with resistors it never matters.

Quote
Tubes, and I presume you have at least one, tend not to be affected much by simple age, and are probably as good as they were the last time the unit was used.

Indeed.  Unless something like storage in wet conditions has corroded the pins, worked its way up and destroyed the glass-metal seal around the pins, tubes don't really "age" when being stored and not in use.  When they are powered up, you're slowly using up the cathode's ability to emit electrons and slowly wearing out the heater or filament, but when un-powered in reasonable storage conditions, they should last virtually forever.  :)

Good points for the OP.  Thanks Nusa!
 
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Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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Thank to you all for the helpful suggestions!
 

Offline Gyro

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Indeed, tubes have almost indefinite shelf life. The leakage rate at the pin seals is infinitesimal, the only potential long term issues are inert gas infiltration (primarily Helium) that the getter(s) can't capture. Other leakage is controlled by the getters until they are exhausted.

The comment about storage conditions is well made though. There are many excellent performance former Soviet NOS tubes available cheaply, however they may have spent several decade in very cold ex-military warehouses. Being in cold storage, these tubes sometimes suffer reduced vacuum due to very low getter activity. As the rate of reactions typically doubles for every 10'C rise in temperature, these tubes benefit from a certain amount of sunbathing (literally) before being put into service. If you're in a hurry, baking at 100-150'C for 24 hrs is an effective method of allowing the getters to restore full vacuum before the tube is powered up. This treatment is particularly important of power tubes, where voltages are high, otherwise catastrophic flashovers and cathode bombardment can result. The 'obvious' solution of using the heaters to warm up the tubes isn't a good idea, zero bias operation can cause cathode poisoning.

As long as there has been no corrosion, even non-ideal storage can be corrected.
Best Regards, Chris
 
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Offline drussell

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I'd suggest replacing it with a 3W resistor, it will have about the same body size. Modern resistors tend to have smaller body size and run at higher surface and lead temperatures. As it seems to be wired between two caps, you don't want to conduct too much heat into their terminals. Carbon Composition had (have) a very good surge capability too.

Ah, yes.  Another great point for the OP.  Thanks Gyro!

Replacing a resistor with one rated for a higher wattage is completely fine, and in cases like this is actually desirable for multiple reasons.

A common misconception with beginners understanding resistor wattage ratings is that the resistor rating is what it is supposed to be able to handle at some elevated temperature without burning up.  It is not like a light-bulb wattage rating where the specification is how many watts the bulb will draw (due to its resistance) with the rated voltage applied to it. 

You can use a 5 watt resistor in place of a 2 watt and it's just fine, not like putting a 5 watt light bulb where a 2 watt maximum should be.  Likewise, with capacitors, you can use a higher voltage rated part without issue, it is the rating for the maximum voltage it will withstand.  You want the capacitance to be the same as an original, but you can go up in maximum working voltage without skewing anything in the circuit.

Just a couple thoughts to help a beginner...
 
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Offline tarrenceTopic starter

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Great teachings for a newbie like myself! Thank you for offering such thorough fundamentals. I feel much more comfortable with the project at hand.
 

Offline drussell

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Great teachings for a newbie like myself! Thank you for offering such thorough fundamentals.

We all had to start at the beginning, once upon a time.  :)

If the helpful man at the repair shop across the street from my elementary school hadn't sat and spent about an hour testing the carriage motor power driver board for our Diablo 1620 daisy-wheel printer, and explaining to me (a 10 year old at the time) about resistors' wattage ratings (it was also a 2 watt carbon composition resistor, which I wouldn't be able to just get at the local Radio Shack), what and where our local Active Electronics store was, (so my dad and I could go on the weekend to get a new 2W, which then quickly became my favorite store as a kid instead of Radio Shack, no toy stores for me! :)) I have no idea how long it would have taken me to learn and understand all these things!

Having someone to ask questions of is incredibly useful.  In this case, my computer teacher didn't know enough about the actual electronics to be of any help on that one, but said "Try the guy at F&H across the street, that's where we get our floppy drives repaired."  (Although he did get me started on 6502 assembly with documentation he brought from home, just for me.  Thanks, Mr. Foster!)  This all would have probably been in 1986.

If you have more questions about components in this unit or the repair/refurbishment, I suggest you try to keep them in this one thread so we all stay on the same thought process throughout your project.

Happy learning, and good luck!!
 
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