The members of the club have become quite experienced with the Philips FM900 series radios. The club obtained quite a few and held a project day to convert them from commercial to amateur use. A standard club EPROM was also produced. Details of the EPROM channels are available here in MS Word or MS Excel format.
The
project day to program and realign the FM900 Radios was a big success, as can be seen in
the photos on this page and by the large number of modified radios appearing on air.
Everybody pitched in and a large amount of work was carried out on the day.
A big thank
you to all the members in attendance and to those who supplied equipment on the day
(Laptops, Test equipment, etc.) and a special thank you to Neil & Robin Fallshaw
for turning their house over to the club on the day.
Should we call Dave a
pi-coupler?
Guy
right in the thick of it... and is that Gordon making some fine adjustments with the
yellow tuning tool?
There are two FM900 EPROM enhanced firmware designs on the amateur market.
One system by BMARC club member David VK2AFI
has several advanced on the fly user definable scanning facilities as well as numerous
other refinements including button controlled anti-repeater facility to release many of
the channels, on the fly priority channel programming, S-meter display, front panel
low power selection etc etc. This system requires the I/O,timer, RAM expansion IC
NSC810 to be installed. The rest of the expansion kit is already installed in the BMARC
FM900's. David has negotiated to purchase a limited supply of these chips.
Click here for more information.
The other system by former Blue Mountains WICEN member Dave VK2UDM was released through the Blue Mountains WICEN group. Among other refinements, it included direct 2 digit frequency display. Unfortunately, this option is no longer available. If you do have one of these, you can click here for some information about it.
Micheal VK2XMD also has a wealth of information on the FM900 - Click here to view his data
Below is an extract from APCNews 16 August 2000, regarding the FM900 noisy VCO fault repair procedure...
Dear Dr Fixit,
I have just bought an FM900 at the local Hamfest, and when
transmitting, other amateurs report low audio and a rumbling or rushing noise on
my transmission, also a rumbling can be heard in Receive mode, can you please
help?
Well, Rumbling old chap, it seems that you have the common
"Noisy VCO" found in many of the FM900 series radios.
The best way to test this is to listen to a fully quieting
signal in receive mode, with no modulation, then turn up the volume, and tap the
main body of the radio with your knuckle, screwdriver handle or similar and
listen to the received signal.
You should not hear any significance sound from the speaker.
If you do , it's likely that you have a noisy or microphonic VCO.
This is caused by the ceramic substrate in the VCO
de-laminating from the metal housing, any small vibrations cause capacitance
changes within the VCO module, and so you "hear" these vibrations in
the receiver as audio.
On the TX side its basically the same problem, symptoms and
cure. Using the same tapping technique as before, listen to your Transmitted
signal without modulation, on another receiver and tap the radio as before.
If you hear a loud noise on your TX signal, the TX side of the
vco is also microphonic.
The other sure way to check, is to measure the voltage on the
VCO output control voltage pin.
Whilst tapping, check to see that the voltage is stable. If it
varies with the tapping, then the VCO is microphonic.
The only cure is to re fix the substrate to the metal housing,
either by resoldering it yourself, (good luck), or you can try this with a hot
air gun if your game.
By far the better option though Mr.Rumbling, is to take it to
a competent technician who is experienced at these type of repairs.
The result will be a wonderfully performing radio once again,
which even today, is still pretty pager free, and basically bullet proof; and
remember, these repairs work on all the 900 series radios, regardless of the
band.
(Lee VK3GK & Dr.Fixit)