Oh Vince,
Why did you do that? Those switches, resistors and housing made a very nice switched RF atttenuator and you broke it up
Ok you might have had to cut out the section of front panel but it would have been worth it.
The generatoe was good for CW as wel as pulse. What coverage did it have? VHF at least but it looked multiband.
No, the switches are no good for power, just low level signals and RF. I looks like KAY bought standard tpggle mechanisms and put their own RF contacts and insulators on the back. You will have to check but they may ground a terminal to the bush in one position.
Robert.
Thanks THD and Robert for the replies. I shall make sure I don't mix these switches with the rest, and label them appropriately...
Robert I understand you are into RF so must have felt heartbroken.... I apologize for that
But I am not into RF at all and never will be if just because it's a niche domain that will never fit my buying power.
So to me an attenuator had no practical interest... but switches being a general purpose kind of part, I saved them.
I am more into general "slow" electronics, where 100MHz is like TeraHertz for an RF guy...
To make it worse, and twist the knife in the wound, I would add that keeping the attenuator assembly in one piece would have been easy... no need to disc cut the cabinet... the attenuator just falls in your hand once you have just removed the retaining nut on all the switches, that's all...but removing those switches from the die cast alloy housing was actually very difficult and painful.
OK I will stop there.
Again I apologize for the pain I caused to your RF guy heart, I really do. I hope I will somehow earn your pardon further down the line when I eventually do something good in the lab, one day, who knows... you just can't rule it out, never say never....
OK, now please excuse me but I need to go back to the bench to dismantle some more stuff.... no don't worry, no more TE... just random consumer junk friends have been giving me this week.
A flat TV, a coffee machine with an open circuit heating element and the manufacturer won't sell any parts so as to make sure you buy a new one rather than fix the old one, and some 2 wheel electric gizmo Segway style, and also an electric pruning shear. The latter I didn't even know existed... but there you go, I learned something. They managed to shove an electric motor and gearbox into the top handle, and the battery into the lower handle. I was stunned....
I did manage to fix something though. Friend who passed the coffee machine also gave to fix the 20 year old Philips stereo system of his old man. CD player would not work.. he got lucky, I had already fixed the same problem on the exact same stereo.... from my dad, 2 years ago. So took me only 2 minutes to establish the diagnosis (tired laser as always, need to replace the complete transport), and 2 hours instead of XXX to take it apart and fix it and put it all back together.
So this one will run for a few more years, I helped the environment, it's not gonna be an e-waste just yet...
See ? I can make good sometimes.... just sometimes