Good job on finding that mic wiring diagram. THAT could be crucial....especially with the sound that you describe when you plug a speaker into the out jack.
For one in most of these electronically switched radios.... one of the BIG things the receive wire does is "ground the internal speaker". If there might be a miswire on the mic... that grounding COULD be happening through a wrong connection .... thus creating an audio oscillator.
I need to go back through here and dig out what you are doing with the microphone and an adapter..... to see what you mean about "when the mic adapter is removed you lose what little sound is present".
The way I am...I look for simplified ways to do things.
Looking at the Romar mic wiring..... if you pull everything out of the mic jack...and use a wire..... pin 2 is the shield/ground that does the switching. If you carefully touch a wire from pin 2 to pin 4 THAT should "simulate" correct wiring for the RCV circuits. THen separately....touching pin 2 to pin 3 should turn on transmit.....
It would be interesting to know what you see there.
Make sure you have a dummy load or antenna on the connector whenever you try transmit. Just in case it works. Antenna would be better for receive.....
While trying the receive...if you do have another radio and can power it up....it would be good to try transmitting on IT...and see if this radio senses it....(like...meter moves)....
For one in most of these electronically switched radios.... one of the BIG things the receive wire does is "ground the internal speaker". If there might be a miswire on the mic... that grounding COULD be happening through a wrong connection .... thus creating an audio oscillator.
I need to go back through here and dig out what you are doing with the microphone and an adapter..... to see what you mean about "when the mic adapter is removed you lose what little sound is present".
The way I am...I look for simplified ways to do things.
Looking at the Romar mic wiring..... if you pull everything out of the mic jack...and use a wire..... pin 2 is the shield/ground that does the switching. If you carefully touch a wire from pin 2 to pin 4 THAT should "simulate" correct wiring for the RCV circuits. THen separately....touching pin 2 to pin 3 should turn on transmit.....
It would be interesting to know what you see there.
Make sure you have a dummy load or antenna on the connector whenever you try transmit. Just in case it works. Antenna would be better for receive.....
While trying the receive...if you do have another radio and can power it up....it would be good to try transmitting on IT...and see if this radio senses it....(like...meter moves)....