We all try and do our best at restorations, but sometimes we have those fixes we aren't to proud of that work well as place-holder (or sometimes permanent!) fixes to get our radios rockin on.
I'll open up with my favourite.
I hate having a radio I can't run on batteries and carry around with me, I don't like it at all. There's nothing worse than getting a killer new box only to find some corrosion or rust on the battery terminals that prevents batteries connecting properly. Of course the correct way to repair this is to take the box apart and replace the terminals, or sand them back to bare metal at least. But all to often I find this is the only thing wrong with a box I receive and the effort required to remove the other components to get in to where the terminals is not an attractive proposition. Especially if it's a notoriously tricky box to get apart or you share my unlluckiness in reassembling a box to find you've accidentally cause a new issue.
So, what do you?
(Norm, please stop reading now)
My favourite go-to fix to get the current flowing again is getting some aluminium foil and scruching it around the offending terminals. When it's only slight surface corrosion this bridges the terminal perfectly to the battery. Most of the time the corrosion is only on the outside end of the terminal and a bit of foil covering this and wrapping around the still conductive terminal coils works wonders and has brought to life every box that refused to work on batteries previously with this problem.
Theres numerous radios in my collection with very tetchy terminals but this little hack fix makes them all rock hard out in the wild.
What's your favourite hack you use on a regular basis?
Rock On.
I'll open up with my favourite.
I hate having a radio I can't run on batteries and carry around with me, I don't like it at all. There's nothing worse than getting a killer new box only to find some corrosion or rust on the battery terminals that prevents batteries connecting properly. Of course the correct way to repair this is to take the box apart and replace the terminals, or sand them back to bare metal at least. But all to often I find this is the only thing wrong with a box I receive and the effort required to remove the other components to get in to where the terminals is not an attractive proposition. Especially if it's a notoriously tricky box to get apart or you share my unlluckiness in reassembling a box to find you've accidentally cause a new issue.
So, what do you?
(Norm, please stop reading now)
My favourite go-to fix to get the current flowing again is getting some aluminium foil and scruching it around the offending terminals. When it's only slight surface corrosion this bridges the terminal perfectly to the battery. Most of the time the corrosion is only on the outside end of the terminal and a bit of foil covering this and wrapping around the still conductive terminal coils works wonders and has brought to life every box that refused to work on batteries previously with this problem.
Theres numerous radios in my collection with very tetchy terminals but this little hack fix makes them all rock hard out in the wild.
What's your favourite hack you use on a regular basis?
Rock On.