Kenwood TS-830: Survival Guide
Kenwood TS-830: Survival Guide
H F-Transceiver
HF-Transceiver
Kenwood TS-830
Survival Guide
PART I
edited by
Downloaded by
RadioAmateur.EU
2
VERSION
Kenwood TS-830 Survival Guide, ed. Olaf Rettkowski, DL9AI, ver.1.2, 03 Dec 2002
REFERENCE
This is a collection of material found on the net. For reference and further information visit
the following sites and/or see the following papers:
http://www.eham.net
http://www.mods.dk
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Amateur-repairs
http://www.kenwood.net
1 Preface .........................................................................................................................6
2 Read first ! ...................................................................................................................6
3 History of this document ............................................................................................7
4 To-Do list .....................................................................................................................7
5 General Description....................................................................................................7
6 Problems and known Fixes ........................................................................................8
6.1 Excessive delay in relay control signal to external amplifier--which causes hot
switching in the amplifier's RF relays ..........................................................................8
6.2 Frequency drift..............................................................................................................8
6.3 Frequency drift during warm-up...................................................................................9
6.4 TS-830S Frequency Drift - "FIX" switch .....................................................................9
6.5 Frequency jumping .......................................................................................................9
6.6 Intermittent shift in display and operating frequency.................................................10
6.7 Intermittent ALC on transmit .....................................................................................11
6.7.1 Problem 1: Intermittent ALC indication [TX] on only one band ...............................11
6.7.2 Problem 2: Intermittent ALC on transmit...................................................................11
6.8 Lack of crispness in receive audio..............................................................................11
6.9 Lack of crispness in transmit audio ............................................................................12
6.10 No power output on most bands .................................................................................12
6.11 Noisy or intermittent front panel control potentiometers [pots] .................................12
6.12 On the AF-AVR Unit, the 4-pole relay contacts which switch the bias to the finals
may fail after extensive use. .......................................................................................12
6.13 Peak-distortion in the RX audio .................................................................................13
6.14 Poor, transmit, SSB carrier-suppression after alignment............................................13
6.15 Power-output falls off when the key is held down .....................................................13
6.16 Premature 12V pilot lamp burnout .............................................................................13
6.17 Rapid jumps in VFO frequency..................................................................................14
6.18 Receive [RX] signals intermittently drop roughly 40 db............................................14
6.19 Receiver AGC-overshoot, causing receive audio-distortion on voice-peaks and
concurrent S-meter overshoot.....................................................................................14
6.20 Television interference with the radio transmitting into a 50 Ohm, shielded
termination..................................................................................................................14
6.21 Receive suffers or goes out after QRO modification..................................................15
6.22 Transmitter "talkback"................................................................................................15
7 Problems and Hints from Newsgroups ...................................................................16
7.1 Beware of high voltage!!!...........................................................................................16
7.2 No sidetone when keying CW, VOX doesn't work on CW........................................16
7.3 Resistor replacement after grid-to-cathode short of the 6146 tubes ...........................16
7.4 Difference between 6146B und 6146W tubes ............................................................16
7.5 Slow power drop-off...................................................................................................17
7.5.1 Slow power drop-off: Answer 1 .................................................................................17
4
7.5.2 Slow power drop-off: Answer 2 .................................................................................17
7.5.3 Slow power drop-off: Answer 3 .................................................................................17
7.5.4 Slow power drop-off: Answer 4 .................................................................................18
7.6 Low power output.......................................................................................................18
7.6.1 Low power output: Answer 1 .....................................................................................18
7.6.2 Low power output: Answer 2 .....................................................................................18
7.6.3 Low power output: Answer 3 .....................................................................................18
7.7 Intermittend drop of power output .............................................................................19
7.8 Problem peaking Drive control ..................................................................................19
7.9 Intermittent loss of drive to final ................................................................................19
7.10 No dip on the plate current and no or small output ....................................................20
7.11 Reducing power output to QRP-like levels, No.1 ......................................................20
7.12 Reducing power output to QRP-like levels, No.2 ......................................................20
7.13 Increasing power output / QRO-modification, No.1 ..................................................21
7.14 Increasing power output / QRO-modification, No.2 ..................................................21
7.15 Intermittent loss of audio............................................................................................22
7.16 Final tubes replacement and neutralization ................................................................22
7.17 Low power output on 160 m only ..............................................................................22
7.18 Crystals for FIX band selection ..................................................................................23
7.19 Changed DRIVE setting after final tubes replacement is normal ..............................23
7.20 Difference between TS-830 and TS-830 "gold label"................................................23
7.21 Microphone impedance matching ..............................................................................23
7.22 Problem with TS-830 TX relay ..................................................................................24
7.23 No operation on WARC bands...................................................................................24
7.24 Receiver signal attenuation when keying the microphone or rocking the bandswitch
....................................................................................................................................25
7.25 VOX trip problem.......................................................................................................25
8 Maintenance Procedures..........................................................................................25
8.1 VFO Lubrication ........................................................................................................25
8.2 Fan Lubrication ..........................................................................................................26
8.3 VBT [Variable {selectivity} Bandwidth Tuning] Oscillator Alignment [approx.
8375 KHz] ..................................................................................................................26
8.4 USB/LSB Carrier Oscillator Alignment.....................................................................27
9 Modifications.............................................................................................................27
9.1 AMTOR modification ................................................................................................27
9.2 WARC modification...................................................................................................28
9.3 RIT / XIT modifications .............................................................................................28
9.4 VFO-230 fine tune mod..............................................................................................28
9.5 TS-830S Low Voltage Supply Optional Improvements ............................................28
9.6 Kenwood TS-830 filter modification .........................................................................29
9.7 TS-830S Operation on 240 V AC ..............................................................................30
9.8 TS-830S Noise Blanker Optional Improvements.......................................................30
10 Product Reviews .......................................................................................................31
5
10.1 Opinions and Ratings of TS-830 owners....................................................................31
10.1.1 Great Radio, Rating: 5 of 5.........................................................................................31
10.1.2 I miss mine, Rating: 5 of 5..........................................................................................32
10.1.3 Good but aging, Rating: 5 of 5 ...................................................................................32
10.1.4 TS-830 The Best of the Best, Rating: 5 of 5...............................................................32
10.1.5 Brilliant audio from 830, Rating: 5 of 5 .....................................................................32
10.1.6 Excellent Radio on the used Market, Rating: 5 of 5...................................................32
10.1.7 Excellent Radio, Rating: 5 of 5...................................................................................32
10.1.8 A quality classic, Rating: 5 of 5..................................................................................33
10.1.9 Still Impressive after all these years, Rating: 5 of 5 ...................................................33
10.1.10 One of the very best, Rating: 5 of 5............................................................................33
10.1.11 Will never say 'goodbye', Rating: 5 of 5.....................................................................33
10.1.12 Nice, Rating: 4 of 5.....................................................................................................33
10.1.13 Nice transceiver, Rating: 5 of 5 ..................................................................................34
10.1.14 Great Rig. Rating: 5 of 5.............................................................................................34
10.1.15 Like putting down a friend; rating. 5 of 5...................................................................34
10.1.16 Going strong after 18 years, Rating: 5 of 5 ................................................................34
10.1.17 TS-830S Finals last forever, Rating: 5 of 5 ................................................................34
10.1.18 Good radio...with a question to other TS-830S owners, Rating: 4 of 5......................35
11 Connectors and Plugs ...............................................................................................36
12 Index...........................................................................................................................37
6
1 Preface
I purchased a Kenwood TS-830S on the used market after passing the ham exam in 2001.
Months before I was searching the internet extensively to get an idea of how an newcomers
shortwave transceiver must look like, especially what features it must have and which of them
are not essentially. The costs did play an important role: my personal limit was 500$ for the
transceiver (a few weeks later the MFJ-949 manual antenna tuner took me again 200$… and an
MC-50 mike from Kenwood again 70$). Regardless of the many (mostly technical) comments
about this decision, which are to be found on the net, my personal opinion is that a transceiver
must look like a transceiver – that means, there must be a minimum amount of metallic shining
knobs and switches and in generally a solid design.
First time using it I didn't really know what I was doing, but the TS-830 knew…and did what it
was expected to do… It didn't take a long time until I encountered the first problems: there was
no output in SSB-mode and I realized the low power output on the upper bands. And here the
story begins. I searched for technical descriptions and procedures to do these repairs and found
them wide dispersed on the Web. And so I started collecting them, in the beginning for personal
use only.
The problem of no SSB TX operation was quite easy to fix: a broken copper ground connection
on the back of the IF board caused the mike amplifier to fail. Soldering a simple insulated wire
to another ground point on this board and I was in business on SSB. Changing the tubes and
re-neutralizing in generally is a simple procedure, but if one had never done this before, even
simple things can be difficult or at least take a long time. This may be a waste of time – on the
other hand its is only the intensive dealing with a problem that makes us learn and achieve
experience and skill.
Many hams do know how to handle and repair older equipment, but a growing number doesn't
anymore since they grew up with solid state technology only or are not interested in the older
rigs. Many newbees are taught to avoid boatanchors, they hear that dipping the plate and
peaking the load of a tube final is much too tricky and time wasting (takes 5 seconds or less…)
to make dealing with these rigs worthwhile.
If You are the proud owner of one of these 20-year old TS-830's made by Trio-Kenwood You
are probably interested in old equipment – if not for liking so for necessity. This collection of
articles and information about the TS-830 should serve as a reference for those who need it. If
You find this file useful, You are invited to propagate it over the net. If You add Your
experience or improve it's content, please email a copy to me. Feel free to remove my name
from the cover page if You want – I'm not the author but only the collector of this stuff. Please
excuse my poor English…
4 To-Do list
• For part II "Manuals": Rescanning of the layout and the board schemes to make them
READABLE; the additional red lines indicating power supply lines are to be regarded.
• Adding of general information how to repair a rig: measurement equipment, procedure;
where to start for locating errors – the information provided with the service manual
seems to be not sufficient, especially for those of us not so familiar with sophisticated
electronic repairs.
• Adding of personal experience in using a TS-830: maybe someone has developed new
procedures or can give hints helpful in operation.
• Adding of detailed descriptions of the function of certain parts – which resistor or
transistor has what function. This will help not only in fixing problems of this rig but
provide some kind of teaching material to learn electronics…
• Adding of test reports of older ham radio magazines, (if allowed to publish…)
5 General Description
(Author: Richard L. Measures, AG6K)
The ancient TS830S is a still a remarkable radio.
Processing: The processor is clean and effective. When an 830 processor is turned on, the S-
meter at the receiving end noticeably increases and the perceived volume increases - yet the
audio is clean and understandable. I have never observed a modern transistor-output radio that
could perform this feat. There are several factors at work here. First-off, RF, instead of AF,
clipping was used to maximize the effectiveness of the processor. Naturally, RF clipping
generates IMD products. Trio-Kenwood engineers minimized this problem by utilizing a post-
RF clipping 455 kHz IF ceramic filter to clean up the IMD products. After the processed
transmit IF signal is filtered and converted to the operating frequency, it is amplified by an
extremely low-distortion tube-type RF amplifier that utilizes [Collins Radio, Co.] RF-negative-
feedback. The net result is a clean, effective RF processor that is not objectionable to listen to -
provided the indicated processing level is kept under roughly 8db.
Strong signal overload: The 830 has extremely low VFO phase noise. When listening to a weak
signal that is 5 kHz away from a strong local signal, the 830 outperforms many modern radios.
However, at signal spacings of 50–100 kHz, modern radios are better at tolerating strong local
signals. On transmit, the 830 generates a remarkably clean transmit signal with a minimum of
adjacent-frequency phase noise.
S-meter accuracy: The 830's S-meter is fairly accurate. Above approximately S-5, one S-unit
equals pretty close to the required 6 db. Above S-9, the db scale is reasonably accurate.
Naturally, calibrating the S-meter helps. Some modern radios indicate 3 db per S-unit--a 50 %
error, and 20 microvolts = S-9. Whatever happened to the Collins standard of 100 microvolts =
8
S9?
Drawbacks:
Slight frequency drift during warmup. This problem can be ameliorated by one of the fixes
described below.
2. Inability to work split frequency at typical frequency differentials.
3. As with any ancient machine, maintenance requires an extra effort. However, newer radios
appear to be far from trouble free. I have spoken with owners who had to return their highly-
complex new radios to factory service five times during the first year.
6.12 On the AF-AVR Unit, the 4-pole relay contacts which switch the bias
to the finals may fail after extensive use.
This relay is neither cheap nor easy to replace. The failure is caused by th.00000 repeated
shorting to ground of a charged capacitor in the bias circuit by one set of the relay contacts
during T/R transition.
Fix: On the circuit diagram, find the leftmost set of contacts. The arm [movable contact] of this
set of contacts is grounded.
Fix: cut the trace from the arm to ground in 2 places about 5mm apart. Remove the foil between
the cuts. Solder a approx.100 Ohm, 0.25 W resistor across the gap. The resistor will limit the
peak discharge current during T/R-R/T switching to a value that will not burn the relay contacts.
13
6.13 Peak-distortion in the RX audio
Cause: This is usually caused by one or more problems in the product-detector [PD] on the IF
Unit. These problems are: 1. Unmatched PD mixer-diodes, and/or 2. Too-much 455 KHz
injection-voltage at the local-oscillator {LO} port of the PD. 3. No terminating-resistor is used
at the LO-port of the PD. This allow the IF-signal to modulate the LO, which adds distortion.
Fixes: Replace the PD diodes, D20, 21, 22, and 23, with 1N6263, Hewlett-Packard HSCH-
1001, or similar Schottky-diodes. {D20-24 are on the IF Unit, about 4 cm in front of the left-rear
corner}. Add a approx. 100 Ohm, approx. ¼ W resistor from the junction of R75 and R76 (470
Ohms each) to circuit common. If you have an oscilloscope or an RF-voltmeter, the correct LO-
voltage, measured across the added 100 Ohm terminating-resistor, should be approx. 600 mV
peak to peak on both USB and LSB. This voltage can be set by alternately adjusting L19 and
L20, which are about 3 cm northeast of connector-11.
Note: This test point is also available, from the component side of the board, on pin 4 of
connector-11, to circuit common.
8 Maintenance Procedures
8.1 VFO Lubrication
The factory does NOT lubricate the VFO tuning-shaft's concentric bushing-bearings or the
VFO-gearbox. In time, this will cause premature wear and play in the drive system. After
26
removing the VFO from the radio, {see section 6.17, page 14, Fix 2} the VFO drive system's
gears and bearing surfaces should be lubricated with Tri-Flow, Break-Free or a similar, non-
gumming lubricant, applied with a small watercolor brush. This procedure should be done once
when the radio is new and once every approx. 5 years thereafter.
Note 1: WD-40 and LPS are not non-gumming products.
Note 2: It is easier to lubricate the bushing-bearings on the main tuning shaft if the VFO is
stood-up, face down, on its tuning-knob, so that the lubricant will run down into the concentric
bushing-bearings. Put one of the original foam packing cushions between the front of the radio
and the table so that the knob can not touch the table.
9 Modifications
9.1 AMTOR modification
1. Remove C500 (4.7 µF) on the signal board (located top center near connector 30).
2. Ground the junction of R-476/Q-100.
28
3. This will provide a very noticeable decrease in switching time.
Add two 22 KOhm ½ W resistors (RD14CB2E223J0, one each across Q30, and Q34, collector
to emitter.#
(#This will improve overall stability and may be applied to any unit before serial #105xxxx.)
Note: These changes are at the owners option and may not be performed in-warranty.
The modification works great, one position on the new switch and everything is normal, in the
other position the CW filter is placed in-line regardless of the position of the mode switch. To
use the CW filters on RTTY/AMTOR I found I had to turn the IF SHIFT control CW to about
the 9:30 position to center the tones in the passband. If you need an even narrower passband,
just tighten it up a little with the VBT.
Note:
1. Applies to any unit before serial: 2010000*, 1120950*, 1132058*.
2. These changes may be performed in-warranty.
10 Product Reviews
10.1 Opinions and Ratings of TS-830 owners
(mainly from www.eham.net)
12 Index
12BY7 16, 17, 18, 33 Microphone 23
6146 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 23 mode switch 25, 29
6146B 12, 16, 17, 20, 21, 22, 25, 34 neutralization 16, 21, 23
6146W 16, 22 Noise Blanker 30
AF AVR unit 28, 30 output power 17, 18, 20, 21
AF-AVR Unit 12, 13 plate current 16, 17, 19, 20
AGC 13, 14, 26, 27 PLL 8, 29
ALC 18, 19 Plugs 35
alignment 22, 25, 26, 27, 28 power-supply 13
AMTOR 23, 27, 29 processor 7, 20, 33
bandswitch 10, 11, 24 QRO 14, 20, 21
bias 8, 12, 17, 20, 23, 34 QRP 19, 20
calibration 22 RF Unit 10, 11, 13, 14
clipping 7 RF-gain 26, 27
Collins 7 RF-voltmeter 12
Connectors 35 RIT 27
CW 11, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 28, 29, Schottky-diodes 12
31, 33 sidetone 15
drive 16, 18, 19, 22, 23, 25, 28 split frequency 7
DRIVE 22, 23 SSB 6, 12, 15, 17, 18, 20, 25, 26
dummy-load 17 T/R relay 34
Fan 25 TUNE 16, 18, 22
filter 7, 11, 14, 21, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 TX relay 23
FIX switch 9 VBT 25, 26, 27, 29
Frequency drift 8 VBT-oscillator 25, 26, 27
Germanium diodes 12 VFO 7, 8, 9, 13, 25, 27, 28, 33
IF SHIFT 29 VFO-230 28
IF Unit 11, 12, 13, 26 VHF 14
IF-signal 12 VOX 15, 25
IMD 7, 13, 21, 33 XIT 27
intermediate-frequency 11, 13 Yaesu 9, 21, 31
lamp 13 YG-455C 29
LOAD 16 YK-88C 29
Lubrication 25
Downloaded by
RadioAmateur.EU