The old Viking sat
dormant for
15 years, which is probably the worst thing you can do to any piece of
electronic gear. Last winter, I began thinking about rebuilding the
Viking and installing it in the more civilized upstairs station. So, I
broke it down and grabbed an empty 3 foot rack from my basement storage
and began re-building it. The RF deck needed a good cleaning, some new
electrolytics for the LV and bias supplies, and a new power cord with a
3 pronged connector. It powered up fine and made a healthy amount of
RF. On the list of things left to do is to rip out the unused remnants
of the harness, replace the micamold loading caps with doorknobs, and
add a better neutralizing circuit.
The RF Deck with 3 x 6146's
in the final
The bottom components with lots of unused wiring still in the
harness to clean out.

New screen resistor, new electrolytics, unused tube sockets
and wiring cleaned out. Good to go!
Rewiring the modulator deck, which has its own 1500 volt
plate supply.
Adding in the relays and control circuitry before mounting
the Thordarson CHT 300.
Up and running comfortably with 150 watts output.
The rig runs very cleanly from
1 watt to over 150 watts output. It actually has been pushed as high as
175 watts out, but I figure the old micamold loading caps are stressed
plenty at the 150 watt output level. The variac in the middle panel
controls the Viking RF deck's 750 VDC plate supply as well as the
modulator's 1500 VDC plate supply.
At all power levels, the 811's in the modulator (which sits under the
bench) are running at roughly twice the voltage of the three 6146's in
the RF deck. The low level audio is generated on one of the station
computers, and equalized with software called Voice Shaper which also
brickwalls the audio
at about 6 kc. That's a
good thing, as the modulator appears to pass audio out to about 15 kc,
which doesn't make for very neighborly operating on a crowded band (15
kc + 15 kc = 30 kc). The
output of the soundcard is routed through a JBL 7110 compressor/limiter
and then fed into a 40 watt solid state audio amp that drives the 8 ohm
tap of a backward connected push-pull 6L6 type
audio output transformer, with the transformer primary connected to the
811 grids. The receiver is an old Yaesu FRG-7700
which sounds very nice in the 12 kc bandpass position. A more vintage
NC-88 is used for casual shortwave and broadcast band listening.
On my very first QSO with the resurrected Viking III it was my fortune
to be received by Bill, KC2IFR, who was making a few recordings up and
down the band. He emailed me a sound clip so I could hear how the rig
sounded. There's still a lot left to
finish up, but it's been fun playing with the old Viking III on the air
once again!
First contact running about 30 watts with the resurrected Viking
III on 75 Meters
During a casual conversation one
afternoon with Tim - WA1HLR he suggested that I reconfigure the primary
to secondary ratio of the Thordarson CHT-300 modulation transformer.
The original 1.73:1 ratio was appropriate for the old 4D32, which
pulled 200 ma of plate current, but the three 6146B's typically pull
over 300 ma of current and present a much lower tank circuit impedance.
Tim determined that a ratio of 2.32:1 would allow the 811'As to develop
much more audio, so I rewired the primary and secondary taps as he
instructed me to. The end result of that was much smoother and louder
audio with about half the amount of audio drive power. The clip below
was captured by Eric - WB2CAU on his Flex 5000.
Thanks Eric for the EQ suggestions! Thank you Tim, for pulling the
Thordarson CHT-300 tap connections out of your head! I am always amazed
by the vast repository of technical information that he has acquired
and retained through his experience over the years. Even more
impressive is his willingness to share it with others.