Here Can You Find The Ham Radio Modifications
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HERE CAN YOU FIND THE HAM RADIO MODIFICATIONS




Here is the mod to restore your HT to full coverage.



The first we "trick" the CPU to think it is in a test mode on each band.  Then

the 440 mother board must be modified to switch the incoming rf into a divide

by 2 prescaler.  the out put of this is then fed into the 440 receiver like a

normal 350-500 MHz signal.



Here we go with the first part of the mod.



Going through with this will cause the CPU to be reset and clear all the memory

information.  Make a back up of the radio first if you don't want to loose any

thing.



1. Open up the radio (refer to ft51_1.jpg)

        a. Remove the Knob and the lock nut from around the shaft. I find a

           small screw driver to work well for this.  If you have a spanner

           wrench use it!



        b. Remove the screw from in between the MIC and speaker jacks.



        c. Remove the 4 screws from the back metal panel, and the 4 screws

           from the plastic L cover over the back of the key pad.



        d. Remove the battery release tab from the back, and the 2 screws

           securing the L cover to the metal back cover.



        e. Remove the front cover, beeing careful not to loose the gasket.



        f. Release the flat ribbon cable from the Main Unit.  Then angle the

           Main unit upwards and pull it away from the radio.



2. Change the solder jumpers on the radio. (refer to ft51_2.jpg)

         a. There are 7 jumpers next to the the sub CPU, Q1001 arranged in the

            below fashion:



           ()         JP1001

               ()     JP1002

           ()         JP1003

               ()     JP1004

           ()         JP1005

               ()     JP1006

           ()         JP1007



        b. If you open solder pad JP1006 you will have extended transmit,

           JP1007 will allow you to change the Band and IF selection in the

           internal alignment menu. (more on this in the next part of the mod.)

           JP1004, if closed, will give you a tone burst in place of the monitor

           switch, and vice versa.



        c. To make this mod work, you must open JP1006, and JP1007.



3.  Once the jumpers are configured, reassemble the radio temporarily.



        a. Insert the MAIN Board into the alumion panel and attach the ribbon

           cable to the main unit.



        b. Replace the front cover and L cover, and secure with a few screws.



4.  The radio must be put into a "Internal System Alignment Routine".



        a. Attach the battery to the radio.



        b. Turn the radio on whilst holding the 2 volume and squelch buttons

           and the call buttons.



5. This will provide access to alignment menu which will allow you to adjust

   these settings for each band.  To select the setting you want to adjust

   use the dial.  To adjust the setting press the FM key until "F" blinks.

   Once you are done adjusting the setting tap the FM key.  This will save

   the setting.  once you are done with every thing, you must make all

   changes permanent.  To do this press the CALL key. The radio will power

   off.

        a. Band and IF



        b. S-meter



        c. Deviation (low and High)



        d. Squelch



   I will describe each of these settings in appendix A.



6.  All we need to do is adjust the Band edge setting for each band.  The

    setting for each band is "BAND 7".  I have a partial list of the

    different band layouts listed in appendix B.



        a. First press the FM key and use the up and down keys to get the

           display to read "BAND 7" on the VHF Side, press FM to save the

           setting.



        b. Press the band key to get to the other band



        c. Press the FM key and use the up and down keys to get the

           display to read "BAND 7" on the UHF Side, press FM to save the

           setting.



        d. Push the Call key to save all settings.  The radio will turn off.



7.  Turn the radio on.  It should now tune from 60-999 MHz on each Band.



8.  If all you wanted was the expanded receive with out 700-999 MHz, you are

    done!  If not, it time for the hard part.



Modifying the 440 board



In this section you will be installing some switching transistors on the 440

Mother Board.  This involves very small SMD parts.  If you are not careful you

can messup your radio!





1.  you will need the fowling parts from yaesu:



PART           TYPE          YAESU P/N

C3082 -- 2 pF -------------- K22148206

C3089 -- 2 pF -------------- K22148206

C3090 -- 2 pF -------------- K22148206

c3091 -- 2 pF -------------- K22148206

C3108 -- .001 ¶F ----------- K22148820



L3021 -- .022 ¶H ----------- L1690381

L3030 -- .0068 ¶H ---------- L1690378



Q3031 -- 2SC4227-R32 ------- G3342277B

Q3032 -- 2SC4228-R42 ------- G3342287B

Q3038 -- 2SC4228-R42 ------- G3342287B

Q3039 -- 2SC4228-R42 ------- G3342287B



R3054 -- 33K --------------- J24189155

R3055 -- 33k --------------- J24189155

R3060 -- 1k ---------------- J24189119

R3066 -- 470 --------------- J24189111

R3071 -- 470 --------------- J24189111



2.  Expose the 440 MHz board. (again refer to ft51_1.jpg)

        a. Remove the Knob and the lock nut from around the shaft. I find a

           small screw driver to work well for this.  If you have a spanner

           wrench use it!



        b. Remove the screw from in between the MIC and speaker jacks.



        c. Remove the 4 screws from the back metal panel, and the 4 screws

           from the plastic L cover over the back of the key pad.



        d. Remove the battery release tab from the back, and the 2 screws

           securing the L cover to the metal back cover.



        e. Remove the front cover, beeing careful not to loose the gasket.



        f. Release the flat ribbon cable from the Main Unit. Then angle the

           Main unit upwards and pull it away from the radio.



        g. Remove the contact unit (the small board that the ribbon cable

           goes into, that is plugged into the 144 and 440 units.) by

           alternately prying gently up on each corner of it with a small flat

           screw driver.



        h. Remove the 4 screws in shield over the 144 unit, and the 1 screw

           that goes into the the board it self.



        i. Lift the top shield, the 144 board, and the second shield over the

           440 board.



        j. Remove the screw from the antenna connector, and lift the 440 unit

           out of the radio.





2.  Install these parts according to the parts layout diagram (ft51_3.jpg

    also ft51_4.jpg shows the board from my radio)

3.  Reassemble the radio.

4.  Power the radio on, you should be able to receive 700-999 MHz now.



Notes on the performance of the mod:



I have done this to my radio, S/N 5H132340, and it has worked just fine.  The

sensitivity in not great, but it works well enough to receive my local police

department on 856.2125.  The step size is fixed to 12.5 kHz, but you can enter

any frequency you like on the keypad, and it will work.  The shitty software

from R/T Sys will not allow you to program or edit any memory that has

700-999 programed into it!





Here is the sensitivity of my radio for a 12 dB SINAD ratio.



FREQ.   ¶V      dBm



600     none    none

650     none    none

700     133     -64.5

750     77.4    -69.2

800     31.8    -76.9

850     9.8     -87.1

900     9.3     -87.7

950     25.1    -79.0

999     30.3    -77.4





Appendix A

INTERNAL SYSTEM ALIGNMENT



These adjustments are all done in software, if you want to change the

deviation, or the responce of the S-meter you can easily do it from the keypad.

The setting of each adjustment is separate for each band.



1.  Deviation adjustment.



        The radio will allow you to adjust the high and low gain separately,

        which allows you to "customize" the transmit audio for you own voice.

        The adjustment for the high frequency's is "MOD H" and the setting for

        low frequency's is "MOD L".  These can be adjusted with the up and down

        keys.  The factory says to adjust the radio to 4.2-4.5 kHz with a 25mV

        1 kHz tone fed into it.



2.  S-Meter



        The adjustments that can be made here require the radio be receiving a

        signal to set the adjustment, as it can not be adjusted with the up

        and down keys, like the deviation can be.



        The "S-FULL" adjustment sets the amount of signal that would cause the

        S-Meter to light fully.  The factory says the amount of signal to

        inject to the receiver, is +20dB¶ with 1 kHz tone and 3.5 kHz deviation.



        The "S-1" adjustment sets the amount of signal that would cause the

        very first unit to light on the S-meter.  The factory says the amount

        of signal to inject to the receiver, is -5dB¶ with 1 kHz tone and 3.5

        kHz deviation.



3.  Squelch



        This setting adjusts the action of the squelch.  (this is my

        understanding) The Squelch circuit is a Bi-level acting squelch,

        meaning that as long as a strong signal is being received the squelch

        will chop off immediately after losing a Carrier.  When the signal is

        weak, there is some hysteresis introduced into the circuit to prevent

        it from chopping a weak signal.



        The first adjustment, "SQL TH" will set the Threshold for a weak

        signal.  The factory setting is a -11dB¶ signal.  You can mess with

        this if you want to, but it is best to leave it alone.  if you do

        write down your present settings first.



        The second adjustment, "SQL TI" sets the signal level required to

        cause the squelch to close at the end of a signal with out leaving a

        burst of static (i.e. a squelch tail).  This is set at -5dB¶ from the

        factory.  This can also cause a signal that is very wide (5-6 kHz of

        deviation) to clip.  If this happens to you, but the signal sounds fine

        when listing to it with the squelch open, this needs to be set to a

        larger signal level.  I have had to do this to my radio, as quite a

        few hams have rich audio!



4.  IF selection



        I have no idea what this does other than setting the receive frequency

        different from the displayed freq.



        I have experimented with this setting on VHF and found the following

        off sets for the actual RX frequency vs. the displayed frequency.



        IF #    Offset (All in MHz)

        1       +29.8

        2       +27.8

        3       +23.25



        If you have any info on this at all please write me an email and let

        me know.







Appendix B

Band setting



I have Experimented with the BAND setting and have found the following limits

on VHF for the various settings of it.



Band #     RX Range                     TX Range



0       60-180, 300-512                 144-148

2       110-180                         140-174

3       110-180                         140-174

4       110-180                         144-146

5       144-146                         144-146

6       110-180                         144-148

7       60-999                          60-999

                UHF

0       300-512, 700-999, 60-180        440-443



If you have any corrections/additions to this please email me with them.



Appendix C



Settings of my radio (S/N 5H132340) from the factory.



Setting VHF     UHF



Band    1       1

IF #    0       0

S-FULL  BB      66

S-1     47      23

SQL TH  72      84

SQL TI  45      5D

MOD L   25      20

MOD H   27      24



Appendix D



Avaliable tuning steps for various band segments.

This part was submitted by Kent, KB1ESG.



Side     Rx range (MHz)       Available Steps (KHz)

___________________________________________

VHF    60 - 179.95             5, 10, 12.5, 15, 20, 25, 50

       180 - 999               10, 12.5, 20, 25, 50



UHF    60 - 699.995            5, 10, 12.5, 15, 20, 25, 50

       700 - 999               12.5





This is version 2.1 of this document and may be posted by any one, to any

place in cyberspace.  You may not charge for access to any place

it is posted. It may not be published in any book with out my express written

concent.  You may modify as long as credit is given to Me (KB9MCI), Yaesu

Japan, Marty N8XIH, Kent KB1ESG, and a copy it is emailed to me.  This copyright

statement must remain in place on any copy's of this document.



Bryan Fields, KB9MCI

Bryan
(708)-862-3485



SOURCE: The QRZ Windows Ham Radio CDROM



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