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Zenith safety cap ID (22-7672-05)

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Andy Cuffe

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Nov 29, 1997, 3:00:00 AM11/29/97
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Could someone please identify this Zenith capacitor (# 22-7672-05).
It's one of the large orange ones from the early 80's that always fail.

If anyone has a list of the values for all the 22-7672-XX capacitors I
would find it very useful.
--
Andy Cuffe
balt...@psu.edu

BUDDSTV

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Dec 1, 1997, 3:00:00 AM12/1/97
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If I'm correct the large orange four lead capacitor The new number is 800-860
and are still available from Zenith. As
far as the parameters I would have to look it up.
Good luck
buddstv


Stefan Huebner

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Dec 1, 1997, 3:00:00 AM12/1/97
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> Could someone please identify this Zenith capacitor (# 22-7672-05).
> It's one of the large orange ones from the early 80's that always fail.
>
> If anyone has a list of the values for all the 22-7672-XX capacitors I
> would find it very useful.

I am also interested, please post to the newsgroup !!!

bye
Stefan!


Michael Caplan

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Dec 2, 1997, 3:00:00 AM12/2/97
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Andy:

Can't help with the specific cap, but I have two others (probably
late 70s). One is 22-5001, measures 1.8 nFd (1800 pf). This one has
two leads, and is about 1inch long and 3/8 inch high.

The other is #PP16-S11S, the replacement for 22-7504, 22-7504-01 and
Admiral 63S102-2. It measures 11nFd. This is the larger one, about 2
inches long and 3/4 inch diameter with two (2) leads out at each end.

Hope this helps add to your database.

Michael
----------------------------------------

On Sat, 29 Nov 1997 20:53:27 -0500, Andy Cuffe <balt...@psu.edu>
wrote:

>Could someone please identify this Zenith capacitor (# 22-7672-05).
>It's one of the large orange ones from the early 80's that always fail.
>
>If anyone has a list of the values for all the 22-7672-XX capacitors I
>would find it very useful.

>--
>Andy Cuffe
>balt...@psu.edu


Message has been deleted

John-Del

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Aug 30, 2018, 7:33:20 AM8/30/18
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On Wednesday, August 29, 2018 at 11:05:14 PM UTC-4, orgo...@gmail.com wrote:
> El sábado, 29 de noviembre de 1997, 4:00:00 (UTC-4), Andy Cuffe escribió:
> > Could someone please identify this Zenith capacitor (# 22-7672-05).
> > It's one of the large orange ones from the early 80's that always fail.
> >
> > If anyone has a list of the values for all the 22-7672-XX capacitors I
> > would find it very useful.
> > --
> > Andy Cuffe
>
>
> I have that capacitor.


You should contact the OP directly. There's a small possibility that 1) he's not monitoring this group after 20 years and 2) he may not have waited 20 years to scrap that antique.

Allodoxaphobia

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Aug 30, 2018, 9:32:21 AM8/30/18
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Or, 3) he died.


sheesh!!!! googlegroppers!

John-Del

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Aug 30, 2018, 9:47:32 AM8/30/18
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Ghoul...

Michael Black

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Aug 30, 2018, 11:16:14 AM8/30/18
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I remember Andy Cuffe posting here, I can't remember when he last psoted.

But the 21 year old reply is lacking in other ways.

Andy was hoping for a decoder ring to figure out what the capacitor was.
He didn't say he needed one.

It's puzzling enough why people reply to old posts, but too many of the
late replies don't even make sense.

Michael

jurb...@gmail.com

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Aug 30, 2018, 8:58:47 PM8/30/18
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>"he may not have waited 20 years to scrap that antique. "

If I had one of those I would restore it or at least make it work if the CRT was good.

jurb...@gmail.com

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Aug 30, 2018, 9:01:28 PM8/30/18
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>"It's puzzling enough why people reply to old posts,"

Seems most of them are on Google. They're probably doing a search and when they get hits they neglect to notice the date.

John-Del

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Aug 30, 2018, 10:01:11 PM8/30/18
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On Thursday, August 30, 2018 at 8:58:47 PM UTC-4, jurb...@gmail.com wrote:
> >"he may not have waited 20 years to scrap that antique. "
>
> If I had one of those I would restore it or at least make it work if the CRT was good.

I have a customer with a late version of the Zenith Vertical Chassis. The old bat insisted I fix it for her again a few months ago (put in a tripler about two years ago). It was shrinking left and right and blooming, and I remember fixing a bunch of these for the same problem. When I pulled my schematic I remembered that carbon resistor that overheats and goes up in value behind the 9-90 module. Looked pretty good with the sweep back to normal; strong tube. If she ever calls me to dump it, I'm putting it my truck and driving it over to your house.

jurb...@gmail.com

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Aug 31, 2018, 12:39:54 AM8/31/18
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That line started with the EC line. The best of them IMO was the GC line, ideally a 25GC45 or 50. They continued the type of chassis but started using those hybrid resistors in the later ones.

Another goodie from back then was the Magnavox T995 chassis, I would take one but I want the older version with the volume under the tuners that actually had good sound. I had a GC Zenith with good sound as well, both of them later went with speaker speakers, and the Magnavox ones switched to a volume control with a shitty taper, the older ones were nice and smooth.

Those were part of my "good" lie of sets when I was in business. They got 30 days on everything, 90 on parts and a year on the CRT. there was NEVER a TV in my main showroom with a rejuvinated CRT. Then we had the discount sets. If I zapped the tune that's where it went, and I told people they were, but all was not lost because ?I had one of the best rejuviators - a B & K 467. It had a very nice touch and didn't destroy the cathode. They gave you a stack of ONE YEAR warranty cards to give the customers with a set that had a zapped CRT.

One advantage we had was a good source for rebuilt CRTs. I forgot the name of the place but a old German guy ran it, did all the work himself. Gave a 3 year warranty. I think he was called Willie.

tabb...@gmail.com

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Aug 31, 2018, 7:43:22 AM8/31/18
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Zapping CRTs ruins them. As emission falls again, as it does, severe smearing occurs. A much better fix is to boost the heater voltage: this lasts. I wasn't a big fan of 10% boost, 33% does the job on most sets. An extra turn on the LOPTF does that easily & cheaply on most sets.

I did try 66% voltage boost on a couple of really bad ones just for experiment's sake, and surprisingly it worked & kept working. One (Sony Trinitron) was so bad that nothing was visible at all on screen, even in a dark room. What kind of strange person kept using it until it reached that point who knows. Anyway the result was plenty of output on all channels, but colour tracking was lousy. That kept working for years until I tired of it.


NT

jurb...@gmail.com

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Aug 31, 2018, 10:07:09 AM8/31/18
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I always tried boosting the filament first. Zapping was the last resort.

Even boosting the filament kept it out the prime stock category.

John-Del

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Aug 31, 2018, 11:10:01 AM8/31/18
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In my experience, boosting filament delivered the shortest amount of service life of any method.

Back in 1981, RCA had a short run of bad HV transformers (quickly resolved). The trans was mostly conventional but had a single brown wire for CRT filament from one of the exterior terminals that went to the CRT board. As originally installed, the wire was routed between the metal frame of the trans and the chassis (metal back then).

If the trans was replaced and the brown wire was routed by the core and not between the frame and the chassis, the filament would pick up a few hundred milivolts by induction and add it to the normal 6.3. Several months after the trans was installed, the CRT would be shot. Fortunately, this happened in warranty. RCA quickly added a bulletin and a service note in the replacement trans that described how to properly route the filament wire.

Zenith in the 90s had a bunch of tubes suffer heater to cathode shorts. Most guys would thread two or three turns of bell wire around the HV trans core and feed the filaments directly (after cutting the grounded filament circuit). This would allow a full floating filament supply that wouldn't pull the cathode low even if the fil should short to the cathode. Problem was, guys would just wire so the filament looked the right color temperature but if the final voltage was much above 6.3, the tube would tire in a few months.

The solution was to use a TRMs meter (15K cycle AC from the fly) and adjust with winding count and/or a resistor to ensure the filament stayed at or even a bit smidge below 6.3TRMS AC. I did those and got many years out of those repairs.

Going back farther, we used to install hang on filament boosters in TVs with weak tubes to allow customers time to either save for a new TV or a CRT swap. Typical life of a boosted tube was two to six months.

I bought a new B&K 467 (still have it and two others from closed shops) and the life of the CRTs after boosting was 6 months to two years. The Sencore was supposed to be better but I never had one of those. In any case, we never sold a boosted tube of any type.

Phil Hobbs

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Sep 1, 2018, 7:42:44 PM9/1/18
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You just have the attention span of a goldfish, is all. ;)

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

http://electrooptical.net
http://hobbs-eo.com

tabb...@gmail.com

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Sep 2, 2018, 2:16:27 PM9/2/18
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On Friday, 31 August 2018 16:10:01 UTC+1, John-Del wrote:
I'm surprised to hear this. I had very good results with filament voltage boosting, the odd ones I kept lasted very well. I don't know at this point why the difference.

What voltage boost % were you using? In what way did the tubes end up ruined? Tubes soon tire if _under_volted.

You mention hang-on boosters, I presume you mean 10% boosting transformers. 10% isn't enough to be adequate for long. It'll tickle it up a bit, but not enough to be really worthwhile.

The zero emission Sony Trinitron I experimented on got 66% heater voltage boost, it ran yellow hot rather than orange. I was surprised to find it ran happily for years like that, but it did. Obviously I never sold it. It was my main set for years, then a second for years more. I kept 2 heavily experimented on trinitrons - the other ran missing the psu board.


I was familiar with Sencore boosted tubes. It didn't always work, tube life was not usually as much as a year and severe smearing always condemned them. Filament power boosting worked much better IME. And the Sencore didn't work on Sonys.

There was also anode voltage boosting, not something I'd consider reputable but I've encountered it being done with lousy tubes in junker sets. It does boost the output, but I wouldn't do it outside of an experiment never for sale.


NT

jurb...@gmail.com

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Sep 3, 2018, 1:22:55 AM9/3/18
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Umm, we used to bump the heater and then let the thing run for about a week. I have seen them get better and better with a moderate boost and then last a very long time.

We never rejuved a camera tube but someone told me and I found out that is you keep one of those old cameras running for days and days looking straight at a white surface it rejuved them somewhat. There was really no way to boost the filament, there was no room for anything.
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