Sherwood S3000-V Stereo FM Tuner Repair

From the Rain City Audio Repair Blog:

This Sherwood FM Stereo tuner came into the shop recently. It’s owner successfully completed a re-cap of the unit, but the specialized tools for performing an accurate FM Stereo alignment are beyond the reach of most hobbyists, and so he sent it into my shop for final adjustments to make it perfect. The owner reported it worked well on mono, but the stereo light never illuminated, and the dial tracking was a bit off.

The owner had done a good job on the re-cap, with nice clean joints, replacing all but the two output electrolytic caps.

Initial measurements validated the alignment; in mono it was receiving at about 1.6% THD.

Up first was a mono FM alignment, adjusting the cascode RF amplifier, oscillator, and IF chain to bring all the tuned circuits into proper adjustment, improve dial tracking, and center the tuning meter.

After those, and several more adjustments on the bottom side for the lower cores, distortion dropped off to around 0.05% under ideal conditions.

Unfortunately, there was no action on the stereo circuit even when fed from the Sencore SG80 generator. I spent some time tracing out the circuit to understand what’s going on:

One common problem on this style of tuner is that if the stereo indicator lamp has failed, the entire rest of the stereo circuit won’t operate. In this case, the lamp is a NE-2H neon bulb, which can lose its neon with age and fail to strike.

Swapping in a new bulb was the first step.

Success – now the receiver responds to the 19 kHz pilot signal!

Time to finalize the alignment, including the 19 Kc, 38 Kc coils and transformers, the 19 Kc null, and separation adjustment.

The 19 Kc null serves to remove residual 19 KHz audio from the final output signals. It’s adjusted for lowest 19 Kc level which provides proper stereo response.

All set! The indicator light correctly responds to stations transmitting in stereo, and there’s about 10 dB of separation between channels. Much more often just isn’t possible on a tube MPX design. All in all, it sounds great!

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10 Responses to Sherwood S3000-V Stereo FM Tuner Repair

  1. sigitas kavaliauskas's avatar sigitas kavaliauskas says:

    hello! Im aligning my Sherwood 3000 III now. Have question: IF filters has only one tuning core, or there is 2 for each LC, one from top another from bottom?

  2. Paul's avatar Paul says:

    I replaced an open burned out 1 1/2 amp fuse on a Sherwood S-3000 tuner and it came on and audio works fine.  Driving sound off PC speakers. However the 6BR5/EMBO tube initially worked and the screen beam expanded and responded as signal strength.  However after a few hours of operation only see the filament illuminating the narrow band on the central axis of the phosphor screen but no beam widening on station tuning. 
    What controls the deflection anodes on the tube or has the tube itself gone defective?  Any thoughts on this would be helpful.  Again there is no audio problem, only the loss of 6BR5 beam deflection response on tuning.  All the components on this tuner are original (1959 vintage) and I was surprised it worked at all after being in storage about 40 years.  Yet the fact that the 6BR5 stopped responding suggests another issue that could come up later?  Again all components except the fuse are 1959 original including the can multicap.  I am the only owner and the unit never had work done.

    Any suggestions of which part of the circuit controls the 6BR5 anode?  Seems unlikely that the tube suddenly went defective?  Again filament and phosphor screen raster are intact but only narrow beam on the central screen axis and no tuning response.
    Thank you for any suggestions of how to trouble shoot.
    Paul

    • Lary Dan's avatar Lary Dan says:

      Dear Paul,
      Intermittents as you describe here are difficult to diagnose. But after rebuilding a Sherwood S2300, about 90 percent of the ceramic capacitors were shorted. If you have a capacitance meter check the values against the schematic. Sometimes you have to pull a lead to get a more accurate reading. Also you should check all the tubes on a tube tester. Lastly you could check the resistors. I know this is tedious but well worth it in the long run, since the S3000 is now 62 years old.

    • Lary Dan's avatar Lary Dan says:

      Interesting, looking at the schematic for the Sherwood S3000, the 6BR5 is associated with C45 and C42. I would compare the values to the measured capacitance. After restoring a Sherwood S2300 about 90 percent of the ceramic capacitors were shorted. A shorted capacitor will give you the symptoms you describe. However also the voltages around the tube should be measured, and if abnormal then the resistors are at fault or the power supply. Disclaimer, there are high voltages and there is a risk of shock or death, so proceed at your own risk.

  3. Where can I find schematic and/or alignment procedure for Sherwood S3000-V Tuner?

  4. Paul's avatar Paul says:

    I have a Sherwood S-3000 mono tuner. Fuse is out and before I can start anything need to replace. Do you know which fuse goes into the unit? I can’t see the markings clearly on the schematic or burned out original fuse.

    Thank you.
    Paul

  5. Mike DeMeo's avatar Mike DeMeo says:

    Love these stories! I wish you were located near me. I recapped a 1959 Admiral Portable TV, the first one with “Sonr” tuning. It needs an alignment really bad!
    Mike W2MDM

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