G
George
Guest
I've gotten myself into a spot of trouble, and would
appreciate some help with it.
This is a Bolun WR-601 wireless microphone, specifically the
receiver for that system, which is powered by a single AAA
alkaline battery. Current is 52 ma. with a new battery.
The system transmits at about 116 MHz.
I am changing the output connector of the receiver from a
1/4" phone plug (not all that useful anymore) to a 1/8"
socket, and that required cutting a notch in the PC board,
which in turn required moving a couple components. While
desoldering and resoldering one component, one lead pulled
out of it, so I need to replace this component with
something.
It is light green, and looks pretty much like a 1/4W
resistor. It is the only component connecting the positive
terminal of the battery to the On/Off switch.
The color bands are orange, orange, gold, silver. So that
would be either a 3.3-ohm resistor, or a 3.3 uH inductor.
I broke it apart, and it is indeed made of very fine copper
wire wound on a core of non-conductive black stuff.
Markings on the board are not all that helpful, but near
enough to possibly apply, but not necessarily, is
something that *might* read "L1".
Well, I'm leaning pretty hard toward it being an inductor,
probably to filter out any RF stuff that might be picked up
around the battery. And I can't think of a good reason to
have a 3.3-ohm resistor in that position. But I just wanted
to see if that makes sense to people who, unlike me, know
what they're doing.
If it is an inductor, I also need to know what I can get
away with as a replacement. I assume a jumper wire *might*
work well enough, but I also happen to have an inductor with
color bands blue, gold, grey, silver that came in a R/S coil
assortment. I have a dim memory of there being a slightly
modified color band scheme where the gold band acts like a
decimal point. If that's right, then this would be 6.8 uH,
which is only about double the original. In fact, I have
two of those, if that helps, so I could parallel them and
end up really close.
Well, I would appreciate some expert thoughts about this.
If it sounds like it's an inductor, the question is how
close the replacement needs to be. Am I right about the
value of the R/S inductors? If not, could I just make the
right coil myself?
Thanks for any suggestions.
By the way, for anyone interested, I got this system on Ebay for
$12.48 including shipping from Hong Kong. It actually works. You
get the lapel mic, the transmitter, and the receiver, but no
batteries. Works up to 20M away. Uses FM. Not exactly hi-fi, but
seems good enough for voice. It's available from several sellers.
The one I bought from was:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=330174450908
appreciate some help with it.
This is a Bolun WR-601 wireless microphone, specifically the
receiver for that system, which is powered by a single AAA
alkaline battery. Current is 52 ma. with a new battery.
The system transmits at about 116 MHz.
I am changing the output connector of the receiver from a
1/4" phone plug (not all that useful anymore) to a 1/8"
socket, and that required cutting a notch in the PC board,
which in turn required moving a couple components. While
desoldering and resoldering one component, one lead pulled
out of it, so I need to replace this component with
something.
It is light green, and looks pretty much like a 1/4W
resistor. It is the only component connecting the positive
terminal of the battery to the On/Off switch.
The color bands are orange, orange, gold, silver. So that
would be either a 3.3-ohm resistor, or a 3.3 uH inductor.
I broke it apart, and it is indeed made of very fine copper
wire wound on a core of non-conductive black stuff.
Markings on the board are not all that helpful, but near
enough to possibly apply, but not necessarily, is
something that *might* read "L1".
Well, I'm leaning pretty hard toward it being an inductor,
probably to filter out any RF stuff that might be picked up
around the battery. And I can't think of a good reason to
have a 3.3-ohm resistor in that position. But I just wanted
to see if that makes sense to people who, unlike me, know
what they're doing.
If it is an inductor, I also need to know what I can get
away with as a replacement. I assume a jumper wire *might*
work well enough, but I also happen to have an inductor with
color bands blue, gold, grey, silver that came in a R/S coil
assortment. I have a dim memory of there being a slightly
modified color band scheme where the gold band acts like a
decimal point. If that's right, then this would be 6.8 uH,
which is only about double the original. In fact, I have
two of those, if that helps, so I could parallel them and
end up really close.
Well, I would appreciate some expert thoughts about this.
If it sounds like it's an inductor, the question is how
close the replacement needs to be. Am I right about the
value of the R/S inductors? If not, could I just make the
right coil myself?
Thanks for any suggestions.
By the way, for anyone interested, I got this system on Ebay for
$12.48 including shipping from Hong Kong. It actually works. You
get the lapel mic, the transmitter, and the receiver, but no
batteries. Works up to 20M away. Uses FM. Not exactly hi-fi, but
seems good enough for voice. It's available from several sellers.
The one I bought from was:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=330174450908