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#1
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
In article ,
"Sun Dragon" wrote: I have a small Furuno radar where the echo return image is missing on the left and right portion of the screen. The fore and aft images are fine. I suspect the "brushes" or slip rings in the scanner unit are worn in the 2 o clock thru 4 o clock and the 8 o clock thru 10 o clock regions. Am i correct in this assumption and if so, are kits available to renew the contacts in the scanner? Thanks, Capt J. Vincent Collins Master Oceans F/V Sun Dragon Depends on what model of Furuno display you have.... Most newer displays have computer generated sweeps, and are Raster Displays. Should you actually have a PPI with a real rotating Deflection Coil, do the Range Rings, ALSO disappear along with the Targets? If Yes, then could be the SlipRings, and or Brushes. If No, then it isn't the SlipRings and or Brushes, as the Range Rings also have to go thru the same connections as the target video. When you turn the "Gain" all the way up, does the "Noise" also blank out in the same places as the Targets? if Yes, then you have a Video problem. If No, then you have a receiver, and or antenna problem. all the above is just basic Radar Repair stuff.... Bruce in alaska an Old School Marine Radar Tech........ -- add a 2 before @ |
#2
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
"Bruce in Alaska" wrote in message ... In article , "Sun Dragon" wrote: I have a small Furuno radar where the echo return image is missing on the left and right portion of the screen. The fore and aft images are fine. I suspect the "brushes" or slip rings in the scanner unit are worn in the 2 o clock thru 4 o clock and the 8 o clock thru 10 o clock regions. Am i correct in this assumption and if so, are kits available to renew the contacts in the scanner? Thanks, Capt J. Vincent Collins Master Oceans F/V Sun Dragon Depends on what model of Furuno display you have.... Most newer displays have computer generated sweeps, and are Raster Displays. Should you actually have a PPI with a real rotating Deflection Coil, do the Range Rings, ALSO disappear along with the Targets? If Yes, then could be the SlipRings, and or Brushes. If No, then it isn't the SlipRings and or Brushes, as the Range Rings also have to go thru the same connections as the target video. When you turn the "Gain" all the way up, does the "Noise" also blank out in the same places as the Targets? if Yes, then you have a Video problem. If No, then you have a receiver, and or antenna problem. all the above is just basic Radar Repair stuff.... Bruce in alaska an Old School Marine Radar Tech........ -- From Lynn, an even older marine radar tech (title under dispute) I think the original poster suspected slip rings (and or brushes) in the scanner unit. Unless there were some Furuno radars older than dirt that had slip rings, none that I know of had slip rings up there. Furuno seemed dedicated to fixed or stationary transceivers, shooting RF to and from the antenna through a rotating or rotary wave guide coupler. You are correct in that if the problem is in a display unit with the "conventional"(?) rotating deflection coils, slip rings could easily be the problem, as you pointed out. The more recent (20 years?) Furuno's with raster scan displays could have a video problem which would blank out 90 degree sections of the video scan presentation at a time. The only one I ever saw with the port and starboard quadrant targets (rings, snow and all) missing had a video processor problem that could not be corrected (by me, anyway) without replacing the board containing the video processor. Heating and cooling around on that board, in the shop, running on a simulator, would make the problem come and go. Seemed to be most sensitive around a big ol' many legged surface mount chip not stocked at Furuno USA. Board exchange fixed it quick enough, but not all that cheeeep. Old Chief Lynn, 20 WPM Extra (and other wallpaper) |
#3
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
"Lynn Coffelt" wrote in
: Seemed to be most sensitive around a big ol' many legged surface mount chip not stocked at Furuno USA. Board exchange fixed it quick enough, but not all that cheeeep. Old Chief Lynn, 20 WPM Extra (and other wallpaper) Come on, Chief! Haul out that big Weller that dims the lights when you pull the trigger and unsolder those 80-wire ICs!...(c; I took a Roland (keyboards and musical toys) tech certification course up in Charlotte so I could get paid for doing warranty repairs on their products. They were adamant at us troubleshooting these very dense computer boards with surface mount technology down to the component level. I asked, "Why? We're not going to replace anything that dense out in the field...swap the boards and let Roland fix it." One of the guys from NC wanted to go out in his truck and get HIS Weller so we could swap out a few chips on the brand new expensive keyboards Roland was showing off to the class. The Roland guy cringed and finally agreed after the Good Ol' Boys showed their hands....(c; ANY electronics, no matter how expensive, has become disposable after about 4 years, some even less, now. The companies act as if a 5-year-old electronic toy that cost $8000 never existed......corporate amnesia sets in. Larry -- Democracy is when two wolves and a sheep vote on who's for dinner. Liberty is when the sheep has his own gun. |
#4
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
"Larry" wrote Come on, Chief! Haul out that big Weller that dims the lights when you pull the trigger and unsolder those 80-wire ICs!...(c; Geeze, Larry, now, as Bruce sometimes says, "I feel a story coming on". Mike and I were in the pilot house of the Washington State Ferry "M/V Vashon, performing delicate surgery in the belly of a Furuno radar display. Transistor on a PCB needed replacement. I grabbed my trusty Weller D550 and Mike took the extension cord and searched for an outlet. He asked the Mate if he knew where there was 120 volts. Mate asked if 110 volts would do, there was an outlet right behind that bench. Sure! Pulled the trigger on the Weller and nothing happened. Just a little curl of smoke from the gun's ventilation slots. Let go of the trigger and smoke, flames and sparks came shooting out of all the gun's vent slots. I threw the Weller gun on the pilot house deck and started stomping on the fireworks display. Mike looked terrified. I WAS terrified. Mate calmly pulled the extension cord plug out of the wall socket. Mike noticed then that the outlet on the bulkhead was labeled "110 Volts DC". Sheesh. Be glad rocket science is not our profession. Old Chief Lynn (Larry, I touched a Roland once!) |
#5
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
In article ,
"Lynn Coffelt" wrote: "Larry" wrote Come on, Chief! Haul out that big Weller that dims the lights when you pull the trigger and unsolder those 80-wire ICs!...(c; Geeze, Larry, now, as Bruce sometimes says, "I feel a story coming on". Mike and I were in the pilot house of the Washington State Ferry "M/V Vashon, performing delicate surgery in the belly of a Furuno radar display. Transistor on a PCB needed replacement. I grabbed my trusty Weller D550 and Mike took the extension cord and searched for an outlet. He asked the Mate if he knew where there was 120 volts. Mate asked if 110 volts would do, there was an outlet right behind that bench. Sure! Pulled the trigger on the Weller and nothing happened. Just a little curl of smoke from the gun's ventilation slots. Let go of the trigger and smoke, flames and sparks came shooting out of all the gun's vent slots. I threw the Weller gun on the pilot house deck and started stomping on the fireworks display. Mike looked terrified. I WAS terrified. Mate calmly pulled the extension cord plug out of the wall socket. Mike noticed then that the outlet on the bulkhead was labeled "110 Volts DC". Sheesh. Be glad rocket science is not our profession. Old Chief Lynn (Larry, I touched a Roland once!) That's why I always carried a Weller Pencil Rsistance Heated Woodburner in my Toolbox. didn't matter if it was AC or DC, as long as it was over 90V. Bruce in alaska worked on to may converted WWII 110DC ships...... in my younger years..... -- add a 2 before @ |
#6
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
"Lynn Coffelt" wrote in
: Mike noticed then that the outlet on the bulkhead was labeled "110 Volts DC". Sheesh. Be glad rocket science is not our profession. Great story, Thanks! I was in NYC, back in the early 80's working on the field change 10 and 14 of the main HF transmitters at the CG Electronics School on Grosvenor's Island for a month. CG and Navy hired us (Tracor) to do this critical field change to a big engineering screwup. The multikilovolt DC from the PS to the main amp's pair of big ceramic tetrodes used to explode the connectors and blow the main case cabling. Some idiots also forgot to INTERLOCK the 3-phase, 400 Hz, 440VAC to shut off the lethal AC line when sailors opened the cabinet. Some died. 440VAC will wake you up, temporarily. Sailors had installed these changes, sloppily, and more died when the guide pins shoved the 440VAC sloppy wiring into the guide pin socket. The explosions looked impressive, but I digress, as usual.....(c; We lived in a flophouse hotel on 8th Ave near 42nd St that dated back into the 1930's, I'm sure. ($130/day) The building had 110VDC outlets in every room with warning signs on them that it was DC and do NOT plug AC appliances in, here. DC was required, still, because the old elevators were all DC operated.... Well, my assistant technician knocked on my room and was REALLY ****ed off. He'd plugged his BRAND NEW portable color TV he'd bought off Times Square into the DC outlet and got a similar fire as you did! It was TOAST...(c; Larry -- Democracy is when two wolves and a sheep vote on who's for dinner. Liberty is when the sheep has his own gun. |
#7
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
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#9
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
Thanks for the replies, I took the scanner unit apart and found the problem
to be the waveguide coupling bearing was siezed up. Because the waveguide is rectangular in shape and oriented with the long dimension fore and aft produced the target display problem of not seeing targets port and stbd! thanks again. "Sun Dragon" wrote in message ... I have a small Furuno radar where the echo return image is missing on the left and right portion of the screen. The fore and aft images are fine. I suspect the "brushes" or slip rings in the scanner unit are worn in the 2 o clock thru 4 o clock and the 8 o clock thru 10 o clock regions. Am i correct in this assumption and if so, are kits available to renew the contacts in the scanner? Thanks, Capt J. Vincent Collins Master Oceans F/V Sun Dragon |
#10
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Furuno Radar Problem
Oh, for gosh sakes, I thought as an "Old Timer", I'd seen or heard of
everything! I've never seen that bearing froze up! Thanks for reporting back. Old Chief Lynn "Sun Dragon" wrote in message ... Thanks for the replies, I took the scanner unit apart and found the problem to be the waveguide coupling bearing was siezed up. Because the waveguide is rectangular in shape and oriented with the long dimension fore and aft produced the target display problem of not seeing targets port and stbd! thanks again. "Sun Dragon" wrote in message ... I have a small Furuno radar where the echo return image is missing on the left and right portion of the screen. The fore and aft images are fine. I suspect the "brushes" or slip rings in the scanner unit are worn in the 2 o clock thru 4 o clock and the 8 o clock thru 10 o clock regions. Am i correct in this assumption and if so, are kits available to renew the contacts in the scanner? Thanks, Capt J. Vincent Collins Master Oceans F/V Sun Dragon |
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