I recently purchased a Saber I (used) as well as a new battery. After fully charging the nicad battery on my Saber rapid charger, I noticed the battery only lasted approx 5 hrs with minimal transmits.
I returned the aftermarket battery and recieved a new Moto nicad and experienced the the same thing. Only this time I noticed the front, side and rear of the radio on the antenna side got quite warm. However the battery stayed cool. I also have a SS Type III and don't have this problem. With either battery.
Any thoughts?
Thanks!
Saber I problem
Moderator: Queue Moderator
Another thing to watch for, is excessive heat generated with the radio in receive/standby mode, that's an almost dead ringer for a shorted PA module as they will self oscillate and take down a good battery in no time.
The junctions inside the module fuse and the PA draws current until it fails.
Self oscillation/ecitation is a problem with these PA's when they are failing, but not always.
If the PA is not going and holds steady output with normal heat generated, then you may also be suffering from the factory defaulted low battery indicator, which on most Sabers is usually set to 158, and this will cause the low battery indicator to trip and halt further transmissions.
It's not the fix-all-to-end-all, but it does help when the level is lowered to a more reasonable numeric value.
Check the current draw of the radio on receive, it should be low, and UNDER .5 Amp.
Also, check your output level, as you should never run the PA at its maximum level...it draws far more current, depletes the batteru faster and provides NO gain on range.
I had all mine set in the low to mid 70's range....never any trouble, even after almost 15 years on one Saber, I have NEVER had to replace a PA module due to failure caused by heat.
The junctions inside the module fuse and the PA draws current until it fails.
Self oscillation/ecitation is a problem with these PA's when they are failing, but not always.
If the PA is not going and holds steady output with normal heat generated, then you may also be suffering from the factory defaulted low battery indicator, which on most Sabers is usually set to 158, and this will cause the low battery indicator to trip and halt further transmissions.
It's not the fix-all-to-end-all, but it does help when the level is lowered to a more reasonable numeric value.
Check the current draw of the radio on receive, it should be low, and UNDER .5 Amp.
Also, check your output level, as you should never run the PA at its maximum level...it draws far more current, depletes the batteru faster and provides NO gain on range.
I had all mine set in the low to mid 70's range....never any trouble, even after almost 15 years on one Saber, I have NEVER had to replace a PA module due to failure caused by heat.
- oh2glg
- Posts: 106
- Joined: Tue Aug 09, 2005 7:32 am
- What radios do you own?: DP4801 DM4601 SL7550 MTP850S
I think this has been discussed before on this board as well, but I couldn't find it quickly.AEC wrote:..factory defaulted low battery indicator, which on most Sabers is usually set to 158, and this will cause the low battery indicator to trip and halt further transmissions.
What is more recommended value here? If I recall correctly, there's two values, both RX and TX. Default for both is 158.