Until now it has been fine, I went to shoot so.e skip on 38 lower and reports came in it sounded horrible and barely legible. I change battery in mic same problem..went to AM and no issue at all. What could this possibly be?
Are you running it off the internal power supply ? My bet would be on a power supply problem that is not giving sideband transmit enough amperage. Nothing garbles SSB transmit faster than starving a radio for power..... AM draws far less amperage, hence it sounds OK. I'd start with the big electrolytic caps in the power supply........reports came in it sounded horrible and barely legible.
Receive is fine and AM transmit is fine.I agree with both Nomad Coyote. Pretty much guaranteed to be an age-related issue. In your case, since AM is working well, you have a lot less circuitry to consider. Since your post didn't say anything about the receive being a problem, this limits the possibilities to the power supply and SSB-specific transmit circuits. Loose circuit board screws and other grounding concerns I lump under the power supply heading.
I did switch to external power and the problem continuesIf the Cobra 2000 has a 12v plug on the back try powering it that way once.
I would look at the bias circuits for the driver and final. Bias problems can really mess up SSB transmit.I did switch to external power and the problem continues
Bubling and burbling would be a good definition.I would look at the bias circuits for the driver and final. Bias problems can really mess up SSB transmit.
It would also be helpful to know what exactly the transmit does sound like. You say it's garbled, but that's pretty vague. Is it crunchy sounding, or is it more of a bubbling and burbling on the peaks, or... ?
Different sounds = Different possible problems.
Do you have a second radio you can listen to and see how the audio actually sounds ?
And just to put it out there....... More than once in my time on 11 meters I've been told by someone that my audio was awful / crunchy / distorted etc etc when there was nothing wrong with it at all and the problem was with the persons receiver !
One more good reason to have a second radio you can monitor yourself on !
It shouldn't need a trip to the shop less than 2 months after leaving the shop...that is for sure.Wouldn't hurt to ask them to key it up and listen on another sideband radio before sending it home next time.
73
Luckily I have backup radios. I am taking it back to them to check out before I tear the warranty sticker. Damn sticker stopped me in my tracks.Unless some 1981 electrolytic cap randomly selected this week to fail.
73