@Handy Andy , save you the trouble...
@groundwire , it isn't that simple
"
Greetings!
No, TR34 ALC sense/amp connects to TR25 AMC/ALC amp.
R131 affects TR26 AMC sense/amp.
<Why? This is where it gets long winded. Readers are invited to
comment...>
The bad thing about TR26, is the inherent fault of placing the emitter
on the AM regulator output line to the finals, audio is always applied
to the emitter versus using the base and running it as a limiter
versus a regulator in itself when the radios' in AM mode.
It conducts when the base voltage reference done by R131 and R130
affects the emitter voltage off the sense line from AM regualtor. It
begins to begins to fall when audio is applied. Falls too far, the
emitter of TR26 is at a lower reference voltage than the base, and
begins to conduct, pulling TR25s' base low and this forces TR25 to
work. By sensing the dropping DC voltage, this circuit operates to
prevent negative peaks from forcing cuttoff at the Finals. The forward
swing is allowed, but C109 acts as a peak/hold filter that recovers
thru a series of set limiter resistors.
It's a cascade effect. Under SSB mode, this automatically biases off
TR26 [straight 12V reverse biases the emitter but the collector
acheives a high impedance 8 volts to provide a reference to TR25 due
to what R131 and R130, along with R129/R128 provide to the sense
line].
In SSB, TR34 runs TR25 instead. TR25 conducts when it's base voltage
is pulled below the reference voltage R129/R128 gives from the line
shared by the collectors of TR26 and TR34.
Due to the biasing of the base of TR26, the collector output is a
steady voltage, but at a high-impedance set by R130 and R131 and
TR25's R128/R129.
A small change in voltage on TR34's collector affects the collector of
TR26 and the base of TR25, and TR25 acts like a switch and changes
it's state [due to the bias reference of R129/R128] and a capacitor
10uF acts like a filter and also something to work against when the
charge removed from C109 is recovered due to biasing
R128/R129/R130/R131 provide. That in turn forces the AF limiter TR24
to conduct.
In AM mode, 8 volts constant is applied to the emitter of TR34, so any
sensing of envelope exceeding a refrence TR34 wants to conduct on, it
can't, no current flows because the emitter is reverse biased.
Whats a pain, is you'd think that simply removing TR26 would take care
of the problem right? Alas, it's not that way. A voltage needs to be
present to make TR25 remain off, and because of the 8 volt constant
used to regulate the base of TR26, this is where the ALC works against
a set value, and TR25 remains off until TR24 pulls this reference
voltage low enough to force TR24 to conduct and limit audio. R128
offers high-impedance to TR34, but will always have a voltage present
on it due to the forward voltage drop of TR26's collector to base and
R130. So, it will always provide a voltage sense and is why TR26 needs
to remain there. The collector to base drop is only .7 volts, but
R130, along with R128/R129, gives TR34's sense line some reference,
only at a high impedance, and a slight change of this line and TR25
acts like it did before. R128 drains off R129's reference from 8 volts
constant.
[condensed from my notes over a Cobra 148 - due to labeling and
additional changes, some parts noted above may vary from 148 to 148 ST
models.]
There's ways around this of course, but TR24 being removed or R131, is
the down and dirty way, except removing TR24 is inherently affecting
both modes and is a lot dirtier in results.
Removing R131 takes care of the 8 volt reference TR26 needs, it then
remains conducting due to R130 keeping the base reference to ground,
but keeping the emitter effectively "off" all the time - no matter
what voltage may be present at the emitter. The radio is not capable
of dropping that much in AM regulation voltage on the emitter to go
below base reference R130 has.
But, due to the bleedoff of R129 from the base of TR25 and R128 and
forward voltage drop and bias of collector to base of TR26 and R130,
this reference voltage is close to, but not quite at the same voltage
had R131 been in place.
Hopefully I have this right...;-)
~Handy Andy