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- Following is a list of modifications for the Kenwood R-5000 general coverage
- shortwave receiver, which I recently submitted to the MODS Database.
- -- Eric Roskos
-
- Kenwood R5000 Modification Notes
- By E. Roskos
-
- The following describes some option jumpers and other features I have
- found in the Kenwood R-5000 receiver.
-
- The R5000 is fairly delicate internally, so you should not undertake
- these modifications if you are not fairly confident of your ability to
- work with delicate electronics (or to repair it if necessary). In
- particular, the receiver's numerous circuit boards are connected
- together with wire harnesses made of relatively fine and delicate wires.
- Also, some of the boards (particularly the IF board) have small
- "daughter boards" containing small surface mount parts vertically
- attached to the main board. These are also fairly fragile, and caution
- is required in handling them.
-
- EXPANSION FEATURES
-
- The R5000 has six "Expansion Feature" options which are not documented
- in the user manuals. These are controlled by jumpers (actually diodes)
- on the CPU board, which is attached to the back of the receiver's front
- control panel, underneath a metal RF shield. Unfortunately, you must
- completely remove the receiver's covers, and unfasten the front panel,
- in order to access these.
-
- Gaining Access to the Jumpers
-
- To access the jumpers, remove the top and bottom covers of the receiver
- by removing the eight silver screws which hold each cover in place. Use
- caution at this point, since the radio will be sitting only on its
- internal chassis, and delicate parts will be exposed.
-
- Next, remove the four flat silver screws which were *under* the covers
- (NOT the black screws that are visible with the covers on) which hold
- the front panel onto the main chassis. Be sure the receiver is sitting
- on a solid table so that the front panel will not fall off when you do
- this, since there are a large number of wire harnesses connecting to the
- CPU board. Very carefully pull the front panel forward and rotate it so
- that you can get access to the back of the front panel.
-
- Loosen the five small metal screws (two at the top, three at the bottom)
- which hold the RF shield in place over the CPU board. The holes in the
- shield the screws go into are slots, which allow you to slide the shield
- off without removing the screws completely. This is fortunate since the
- screws are fairly small. Remove the RF shield.
-
- Changing The Options
-
- Locate the row of approximately eight small, vertically-mounted option
- diodes on the CPU board. They are labelled D65 through D72, and are
- located near and perpendicular to six-pin inline connectors 54 and 55,
- and parallel (and directly adjacent to) eight-pin connector 53. Behind
- connector 53, you may see another row of option jumpers; in my R5000,
- most of the diodes in this row were not installed. They are numbered
- D73-D79. Note that D65-D72, D73-D79, and connector 53 (which goes to
- the front panel keyboard matrix) are all read by IC53, an 82C55 PIO,
- which strobes the cathodes of one of the three rows of diodes and then
- reads the anode side of each diode in the row in parallel; it is pulled
- up by resistor pack R850 unless the diode is connected, in which it is
- pulled down by the (negative-going) strobe.
-
- You enable one of the options by cutting the top loop of the wire coming
- out of the anode end of the diode (remember that these are vertically
- mounted diodes, so the end which is sticking up forms a loop). It is
- suggested that you just cut through the wire carefully, and bend it
- slightly to one side; then if you want to disable the option in the
- future, you can carefully re-solder the connection without having to
- solder a new diode onto the board.
-
- The jumpers we are concerned with are D65-D72. Note that the other row
- of diodes (D73-D79) are also option jumpers, but they are not documented
- in the R5000's technical manual; the manual's parts list simply says
- that D73 is installed in Australia, and D74-D76 are installed in Europe.
- Only one of these (I think D79) was installed in my receiver; and the
- parts list doesn't say what it is for. I'm interested in hearing from
- anyone who may know what these undocumented jumpers do.
-
- The meaning of each jumper is as follows:
-
- D65: Selects whether the display will show in 10 Hz increments (diode
- present) or in 100 Hz increments (diode absent). As shipped, the diode
- is present, which is probably what you'll want since it gives a higher
- resolution to the display. I don't know if it affects tuning; the radio
- does tune in 10 Hz increments with the diode installed.
-
- D66: Controls whether the mode buttons will generate a morse-code letter
- through the speaker when depressed (diode present) or will simply beep
- when depressed (diode absent). As shipped, the diode is present, and
- morse-code letters are generated through the speaker.
-
- D67: Controls whether FM mode will step in 2.5 kHz increments (present)
- or 500 Hz increments (absent), when you have the front-panel step switch
- "on" (STEP displayed on the display). This applies to HF-band FM;
- VHF-band FM (with the VC20 installed) already stepped in 500 Hz
- increments. As shipped, the diode is present, and steps are in 2.5 KHz
- increments.
-
- D68: Controls the "BUSY STOP" feature. With the diode present, scanning
- will stop when the BUSY light comes on only in AM and FM modes. With
- the diode absent, scanning will stop when the BUSY light comes on in all
- modes. Note that this is the modification some radio stores sell as an
- extra feature, by connecting the "dimmer" switch to the option diode so
- that you can turn this on or off from the front panel.
-
- D69: "Memory search" feature. This is (in my opinion) the best of the
- extended options. The diode is shipped present; as shipped, the memory
- search feature is disabled. If you remove the diode, you enable the
- feature. With the feature enabled, when you press the orange M.IN key
- the first time (to allow you to select which memory you want to store a
- frequency in), the silver "1MHz Down/Up" buttons on the front panel
- allow you to step through the set of *unused* memory positions. This
- lets you select a memory to store in without having to scan through all
- the ones you've already stored into. The front panel knob still scans
- the whole set of memories, so you don't lose any functionality when you
- enable this feature. Also, when you are in the memory mode (i.e., the
- mode in which M.CH is displayed on the display) and not storing into
- memory (normal operating mode), the Down/Up buttons step through the set
- of *used* memories, skipping any unused ones.
-
- D70-71: These jumpers are currently unused (according to the manual).
-
- D72: I have not tried this option. According to the manual, if you
- remove the jumper, you are prevented from storing into a memory channel
- which has a frequency stored into it. I don't know whether this
- completely disables all M.IN operations, or just the attempts to modify
- used channels; or whether there is a way to get around this (e.g.,
- whether the CLEAR button still works).
-
- That's all the options that are documented. I've tried all except D65
- and D72; I didn't want to take the radio apart multiple times to try
- those, since they didn't sound like particularly desirable features. If
- anybody tries them (particularly D72) and finds details of how they
- work, let me know and I'll update the description.
-
- OTHER NOTES
-
- Note that the Serial Port option, which is fairly expensive, actually
- consists simply of two readily-available ICs: an 8251 (the manual lists
- a uPD8251AFC), and a 4040. The 8251 UART plugs into the IC54 socket on
- the CPU board (which you access as described above); the 4040 plugs in
- to the IC55 socket next to it. Another IC to know about in connection
- with this option is IC56, a 7404 inverter, which is what drives the
- serial port socket in back of the radio. According to the manual, the
- pin assignment on this socket is as follows:
-
- 3 - RXD (in)
- 4 - TXD (out)
- 5 - CTS (in)
- 6 - RTS (out)
-
- I haven't actually tried these to verify them. Also, there is a CMOS
- 82C51 available, and an NMOS 8251. According to the manual, the NMOS
- 8251 is used; although most of the other parts on the board are CMOS. I
- don't know whether the IC kits they provide actually supply the CMOS or
- NMOS version.
-
- In addition to these IC kits, to connect to an RS232 interface on a
- computer you have to have an external converter to convert from the TTL
- voltage levels coming out of (and going into) the socket, to the RS232
- levels. That is the other part of the serial port kit (the "IF232").
- Don't connect an RS232 port directly to the serial port socket on the
- back of the radio! You will (at least) damage IC56.
-
- ---
-
- Note that there are two potentiometers (VR2 and VR3) mounted on top of a
- small PC board attached to the top of the control panel (accessible when
- you remove the top cover). VR3 controls how long it takes for scan to
- resume after the BUSY light goes off, and VR2 controls the scan speed.
- From the design, it looks like maybe the person who designed the
- receiver intended for these to be external controls, and then they put
- them inside when they packaged the receiver.
-
- What's interesting about these controls is that they, and the IF shift
- control (and another control used in aligning the receiver) are read
- through an A/D converter. They actually serve as digital inputs to the
- microprocessor. It's unfortunate that they didn't use one of the
- channels on the A/D converter to read the signal strength meter (so you
- could find the signal strength (AGC level) through the serial port)
- instead of using them for these relatively minor functions. EEB in
- Vienna sells a modification for the R5000 which allows their CRIS
- computer interface to read the AGC level, but I don't know how it works.
-
- ---
-
- One other thing to note involves installing the optional filters.
- First, I found that the AM filter which came with the radio introduced a
- whistle into most AM signals. I replaced it with the optional AM
- filter, and it eliminated the whistle (and gave a "fuller" sound to the
- AM).
-
- Also, note that if you install other filters, you have to install them
- "in order" -- in other words, the narrowest has to go in the N position,
- the next narrowest in the M1 position. Note that the M2 position is
- already occupied (as shipped) by a high-quality SSB filter. The reason
- they have to be in order is that as you select narrower and narrower
- filters, the wider filters remain in the circuit, so if you put a
- narrower filter in M1 than you have in N, it will stay enabled even when
- you select the wider filter, causing the wider filter to have no effect.
-
- It's a little unfortunate that it works that way, since the M1 filter is
- only enabled by the switch (not in AUTO mode), which would be ideal for
- the very-narrow YK88CN filter. I have identified a modification to make
- M1 be selected only when the switch is in the M1 position; it involves
- disconnecting 1/2 of a dual diode and soldering a diode between two
- points in the filter selection circuit, but I haven't tested it since
- I don't have that many filters in my radio.
-
- --
-
- Note that the YK88CN filter is very useful if you are an RTTY
- enthusiast; it is a worthwhile option. You can use it to receive VFT on
- a PK232 (so you don't have to pay $1000 for an M7000), and it helps in
- tuning AMTOR when there is a lot of adjacent channel activity. The IF
- shift shifts the frequency of the FSK tone produced in this mode, which
- is necessary to get it tuned properly for the PK232.
-
- --
- Eric Roskos, IDA (roskos@CS.IDA.ORG or Roskos@DOCKMASTER.ARPA)
-