Good to ask!
This would be a "tough call" because to know this would require the radio on my bench to even listen to it for this performance hit to show up.
Cobra 142GTL AGC detector and Amp
Locate C22 - [by TP4] note it's aspect to D4
It's a "detector" that applies the output on FET1 from L3
D5/D6 D8/D9 are part of a "balanced bridge"
It starts out as "Non linear" amplification - takes a DVM to listen on the AGC to know this compared to the voltage chart - because you're looking at a rising voltage that REDUCES the voltage across the Collector - to Emitter of any point in the RF amp strip - not all places are tapped into that AGC line - only key sections.
So sorry, this one goes to the PIN section - but to know how that PIN section is working - you look at R17 - the 1.8K - What sends me back to the IF strip is from this - D4 can detect the IF as a Carrier and push down the signal - any signal - which would be the IF strip's own "carrier" - you have to tune the strip for the audio side - and if you'll notice One of the Balanced Bridge Diodes -
D8 is acting like an RF Switch - but only in SSB modes C16 is a 4.7uF cap that controls the SSB delay of AGC.
When you put the radio in AM mode - R50 drops, D8 is cut off - stopping C16's influence - when it's off - C17 works the circuit exclusively. C17 is much smaller lower value - but since caps in parallel ACROSS a power line - ADD together - in SSB mode C16 is added in, making C16's influence as much much higher slowing down the AGC - and so you'd see S9 a lot quicker - thinking you're done...
But my head scratching came from the L3 - and the Tri-Tied 3-stage amp section - uses a Tantalum to "slow it down - so you can hear weaker signals - if you remove it - you hear very compressed audio - but if the Tantalum is too old, it's ESR then accelerates the amps response to a point that it's very pinched and words get cut off and really poor noise floor performance appears in the speaker - then that Tantalum is suspected - change it to see if the strip recovers. The ESR of the cap - increases the drive output level - so it will pinch - you don't hear anything because of that effect - overdrive the output - put the cap in or use a higher value one to replace it -
CHANGES this IF sections response to incoming signals.
Found more than one tantalum in different radios in their IF strips going bad from being leaky.
Locate D14 and Pull one leg to disconnect the PIN Attenuators from the input so the "Signal" from the Signal Generator can get in there and get processed...
In this scenario, I treat this like I'd tune a PC-122 - REMOVE a PIN DIODE that feeds the AGC to the section - or at least find the resistor and disconnect the AGC power - helping you localize and properly center the tuning of the IF Strip so it's (Radios') AGC is not "defeating" your effort to capture the signal and THEN let AGC determine the Selectivity by affecting the sensitivity.
That would be D14 - takes out the influence so the Signal Generator doesn't get attenuated.
CAUTION:
- Do Not Transmit - remove TP 7 and TP 8 wires to disconnect the Driver And Final BEFORE you remove D14
- D14 is part of a Protection Circuit that prevents excessive RF power from damaging the Receiver side.
- Restore D14 BEFORE you reattach TP 7 and TP 8
So NOT APPLY (See my post above ) More than 100uV to the input to reduce the potential for damages in over amplification.
So I've given you a lot of notes to you and to
@kaos513 - let's see if any of this precipitates out...