[Heath] AR-3 issues

ChrisIwata chrisiwata at aol.com
Fri Oct 19 17:43:29 EDT 2018


If you are hell-bent on getting your AR-3 working, you can buy a 
reduction drive from Dan's Small Parts.  These are good quality Jackson 
Bros NOS and can stand quite a bit of torque.  I've used them on many 
rigs I've built.  They're  in the $15 category plus shipping.   I used 
one on my SB-104 VFO.

This requires surgery.  You'll accept that your AR-3 variable cap is 
1:1.  You'll cut the shaft, add the reduction drive, then connect the 
dial-cord wheel and knob on the other end.  You'll have to also figure 
out how to mount the reduction drive so it is stable.

  Lotsa work, but you'll be back in  business

Chris, KL7DM

On 10/19/2018 11:42 AM, Fred wrote:
> I had this problem with an AR-2. At first I thought it was supposed to be 1:1. I removed the tuning cap and soaked the shaft with Liquid Wrench. It took a lot of working it free by hand but it works smoothly now. It’s a planetary drive with three small ball bearings. There’s no way I  see  to  disassemble it without destroying it.
> Unfortunately, I need the vernier dial for my AR-3 also. I have the brass shaft bushing but the plastic disc is cracked in half. I hope to try and fashion one.
>
> Fred
> WA3KIO
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Oct 19, 2018, at 1:05 PM, Kenneth G. Gordon <kgordon2006 at frontier.com> wrote:
>>
>> I want to restore at least one of the two AR-3s I have here since my very first Novice
>> receiver in 1956 was an AR-3. I couldn't afford a cabinet for it.
>>
>> Previous to that, I had worked all summer for my step-father's construction company to buy
>> a DX-35, which I used subsequently for many years.
>>
>> The BFO in my first AR-3 never worked and due, at least partially, to that problem, I made
>> exactly two contacts my entire Novice year, one of which was a local about 2 miles away.
>>
>> I subsequently studied hard and passed my Conditional Class license test the next year,
>> 1957, at which time a sub-contractor for my step-father's general construction company
>> gave me a Hallicrafters S-41G which he had found abandoned in the basement of the home
>> he had recently bought. At least the BFO in that thing worked.
>>
>> I made many contacts with that almost-useless piece of junk receiver. Subsequent to that,
>> my Mother took pity on me and bought a BC-348 for me. Then I was in heaven.
>>
>> Now, I want to restore an AR-3 mainly to see just how bad it really was/is when it is working
>> at "peak efficiency".
>>
>> The main problem I am having with BOTH of these two AR-3s is that although the
>> main-tuning capacitor in the AR-3 normally has a built-in 5:1 vernier, BOTH of mine are
>> frozen solid and are now a simple 1:1 dial.
>>
>> I propose to remove the capacitors and soak them in a jar filled to the brim with PB-Blaster
>> in hopes that the stuff will soak down into the mechanism and loosen at least one of them
>> up.
>>
>> But, does anyone here have anything which might work better to do this?
>>
>> Ken W7EKB
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