Hi there. I'd like to install a pot on my radio(s) so that I can control how much of my signal gets processed by the echo circuitry. That is, I'd like to use the pot to allow a portion of my voice to bypass the echo circuitry.
The qustion is, how do I wire it up? Can I just wire it to the echo board's input and output wires, and ground to the chassis?
Thanks.
techs: wet/dry pot for echo
Discussion in 'CB Radio Forum' started by RockinChair, May 29, 2013.
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Not sure what you're asking, but I've dealt with echo boards before so I'll attempt to answer. Does your radio have echo? If so does it not have a knob that not only turns the echo on/off but also allows you to determine how much of your voice gets "echo-fied" (if you will)?
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Along the lines of Turbo-T's response, isn't this what the Dual control for echo suppose to do? Should have 2 knobs, probably stacked. One should control the delay, the other the "reverb" or wet/dryness. Turn the latter up too much and you sound like the janitor in drumb, like your inside a barrel. The first is the echo, the repeating.
If your wanting the echo to sound clean, which is what your post seems to indicate, don't turn the knobs very much at all. I know with my General Lee, there was no instructions, so I had to find out where to set this, by trial and error. Easiest way was to crank it up and have someone tell me to turn it down. When they did, they pretty much committed themselves to helping me adjust it. I tried setting it using the Talk-back, but was not hearing much of it through that. I don't have an external speaker, and the speaker on the radio wasn't giving me much help. -
And if you run SSB, turn it all the way off...
handlebar Thanks this. -
I have a General Lee and a DX959, both of which came from the factory with a dual-control echo.
If one of the pots is indeed a wet-dry, then maybe I need to look at replacing it with a pot with different (smaller) electrical values, so that I can have finer control. I can never get it right where I want it - always too much, or none. On the General Lee, I find that if I keep the outer pot at (or slightly to the right of) the inner pot, it sounds halfway decent.
Maybe I need to break down and have my General retuned, now that I replaced the modulation limiter, that way I can use my MobileMax with it. -
Not really any local SSB traffic here, and I have yet to be able to make a DX contact; my DX959 is stock-outta-the-box. And it drifts pretty bad, too.
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I don't recall of any 959's coming factory with echo. The GL's did though. Have you tried ch. 38 on SSB? You may not get any "local" SSB traffic, but you may get some DX traffic such as there was today about 30 minutes ago. I talked to 292 in Huntsville AL on 38 LSB, then made a contact to Salt shaker on ch 15 AM.
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Same applies for AM

handlebar Thanks this. -
You're right, I have the MobileMax on that one.
I've never been able to make a DX contact barefoot. The radio is stock, and some time on a good technician's bench is in order before that little Golden Eagle 150 spreads its wings. -
Rockin,
Most SSB radios, even solid state ones, still need a few minutes' warm-up time. As some of the parts heat up under normal circumstances, they can change the values of the parts in the synthesizer and heterodyne oscillators (depending upon how your radio makes SSB from what would otherwise be an AM signal.)
I generally figure on about 20 minutes for any of my SSB gear to warm up enough to minimize drift, from my Hammarlund boatanchor receivers to my Griefkits and Emperor Shogun mobile. On cold days it can be longer, although it's nothing here in Mayberry RFD like it was in Bareflanks, Alaska.
The only way I know to avoid it is to put the crystal in an oven and run a small incandescent lamp near the synthesizer that's always on.
73
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