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Anytone 6666

How did you determine this? Are you saying it 1kc off what the display says?
my 8 digit frequency counter and i also own 11 other radios and another 6666
this 6666 is low on lsb and i can not find a service manual for it
my other 6666 is dead on as are my other radios
 
Since you have no answer i will just set in the menu FIN to R and T and tune to a known station.
thanks for no real answers as I was looking for..
just not much out there for documentation on the 6666 and very select few have the service manual and they won't tell anyone
 
my 8 digit frequency counter and i also own 11 other radios and another 6666
this 6666 is low on lsb and i can not find a service manual for it
my other 6666 is dead on as are my other radios
You didn't answer my question; is it off freq based on the display or is the display showing the correct freq but you need to tune 1k lower to lock in?
 
You didn't answer my question; is it off freq based on the display or is the display showing the correct freq but you need to tune 1k lower to lock in?
my counter is showing it low on lsb on every channel usb is fine
my 8 digit counter
my other 6666 reads as it should hence i just need to adjust the lsb pot if there is one.
But i have no schematic or service manual
hence why i asked if anyone knew the LSB tuning p o t or VR for the 6666

Sure i can set the clarifier to RT and spin it and get it on that way but id rather keep the radio to R on clarifier and set it properly on transmit.
 
BTW you really need to mellow out a bit. The rig has a VFO so YES just tune to the station you are talking to. This is how REAL radios work.
that means nothing the radio should be on on transmit weather i can use a clarifier or not, I do not have to chill out when i can not get an answer to my question..
weather it has a vfo or not, it still should be transmitting on frequency without having to twist a vfo and yes i also have many HF rigs and they transmit on frequency so don't pull your baby real radio crap,,. you do not know the adjustment to the 6666 why did you even waste time typing (idiot)
 
that means nothing the radio should be on on transmit weather i can use a clarifier or not, I do not have to chill out when i can not get an answer to my question..weather it has a vfo or not, it still should be transmitting on frequency without having to twist a vfo and yes i also have many HF rigs and they transmit on frequency so don't pull your baby real radio crap,,. you do not know the adjustment to the 6666 why did you even waste time typing (idiot)

Well yeah actually you do need to chill out a bit. Just because you did not get the answer you were looking for straight off does not give you the right to call people idiots. In fact it shows your true colours and will result in more people refusing to assist you in the future. I mean why would they help an ingrate anyway?
 
I didn't tap on it but I'm assuming it's the service manual?

If so that's a great addition to the forum!

Unfortunately, no. I have been looking high and low for the service manual too. Someone posted this on the web and I ran across it in my searches. It is the freq. alignment process for the AT-6666 / CRT 9900. It is what davew41 was asking for (before things went downhill).
 
Unfortunately, no. I have been looking high and low for the service manual too. Someone posted this on the web and I ran across it in my searches. It is the freq. alignment process for the AT-6666 / CRT 9900. It is what davew41 was asking for (before things went downhill).


Well that's still a plus, more info on it than we had before at least! Your info is definitely appreciated!
Uh oh, what exactly went downhill?
 
yeah, I know this is a 4+ year old post but hopefully someone can benefit from my reply.

any cb radio with a 10d4 filter (99% of the ssb 10.695 I.F staged C.B radios) is gonna be rubbish compared to a 600 buck + real ham radio transceiver even with a stock ssb filter in regards to dynamic range..thats where the sherwood test would "drop your jaw to the floor" and the super duper mod would look silly at the bottom of his list

however
Unless it has a filter cascaded after it (at the price of reduced sensitivity when engaged but that can be a good thing too therefore increasing dynamic range in doing so as well as selectivity)...

Exactly - Except you can have both at the same time.

Take one of Franklin's 10.695 Channel Guard kits or make your own and remove the stage coupling cap right after the NB and install it there. Instead of setting it up for a zero gain/loss, mod your RF Gain to max, and use the RF gain knob to control the +DC (13.8v) to the circuit. Adjust incoming +DC voltage so that when the RG gain knob is at 12 o'clock, you have zero gain/loss (keep incoming signal low - below AGC turn on). Also, doing it this way, you don't have to re-calibrate your S meter. Keep the NB on. This way, the signal going into the circuit has been "cleaned" up. You may need to change the value of the transistor bias resistor to get a linear response as you increase/decrease +DC to the circuit.

With the RF Gain @ 12 o'clock, you get "normal" max sensitivity and -100dB @ 10 KHz selectivity. Turn the RF Gain CCW and you reduce the sensitivity but increase your selectivity even more. Turn the RF Gain CW and get an increase in sensitivity (past the normal max sensitivity) and still retain very high selectivity. And yes, you can hear signals that otherwise you wouldn't. Now whether you can get them to hear you is another matter...:p.

I usually keep my RF Gain at 12 o'clock but when there is a station that is right in my noise level, I dial it up and pull him out with ease. It has more sensitivity and selectivity than any of my HF rigs.

Basically, greater dynamic range, increased selectivity, and increased sensitivity (variable, clean, attenuator/preamp) for any radio with a 10.695 I.F. stage.

About the Channel Guard from www.cbcintl.com:
The CHANNEL GUARD combines an IF amplifier stage with two high-Q crystal elements. You install it at an early IF signal point, before the signal branches off to the separate AM, FM, or SSB detectors. The result — razor-sharp selectivity in every mode. Since the “Q” (Selectivity Factor) of a crystal is many times higher than the normal tuned IF transformers, the strength of interfering signals even slightly off the center IF frequency drop off very quickly. Bleedover is greatly reduced.

FEATURES: · Provides up to 100 dB adjacent-channel rejection. This is much better than the majority of CB transceivers, which typically specify only –40 to –60 dB. A factor of “100 dB” means that any signal outside the normal 10 KHz CB channel spacing is reduced in strength by a factor of 10 billion from channel center. No reduction in receiver sensitivity. In fact, the CHANNEL GUARD adds one stage of amplification at the most critical point—right in between IF filtering stages. You may even hear those weak signals that you missed before.
 

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