Andy had the correct transistor circled in yellow. From this view, the pin in question is the bottom left. It already has what looks like a "202" resistor soldered from this pin to ground right below the transistor. Parallel another 470 ohm resistor from that pin to ground. The screw in the corner is an easy place to pick a ground up. The audio will jump to life with the full 40 plus watts of PEP. Anything from 470 ohms to 1k works good here. If the value is too low you may start to hear "pumping action" from the AMC. That symptom would be heard as a sudden reduction in mic gain on the first loud sound the mic picks up. At 470 ohms and with too much mic gain, this can be noticed. The 1k resistor eliminates that but has less AMC range.Ok, did some looking around.
Notice the SMD Op am chip with 2904 on it - just under the connector and by the cut wire?
The 2904 is a similar op amp chip to the 4558 - means it has an op amp for mic and the other for TX/RX switching.
There is another further over to the center by and behind J5 - a 10-pin ribbon cable connector - that connector is by a 2 channel Volume control (Conditioner) for Serial Data...M62429.
Ok, the YD 1517 is a 22 watt dual channel power amplifier...
All the datasheets I could get are on board this post...
The following is based upon observation and may or may not be the proper procedure, it is STRONGLY recommended that you review this post first and then decide - either to wait for verification or if you have nothing to lose - proceed with caution - any and all errors and liabilities are now on you.
View attachment 27279
Ok, review the above, you can always set up a test jig on a set of test probes with the 470 ohm resistor and see if this works, but the part he's seems to be talking about is here...the yellow box.
The Red box is so you don't get lost. These are steering and power protection diodes for areas that can be exposed to reverse or excessive voltages - they prevent reverse polarity or backfeeding from excessive voltage that can return into a circuit and damage it.
Let me know how it goes...
Wow, this radio suddenly has a lot of potential. Not too expensive either, might just pick one up to play with. Thanks for sharing the mod!
You could easily say to us as my uncle once said to me when I'd think I had it all figured out but didn't "remember I taught you everything you know, but not everything I know"
Thanks to you Shockwave, I showed your post and my post to the techs at Stryker and they were nice enough to try the mod out on the sr94hpc themselves with success. Then I did the mod with excellent results. Good job man. Now this radio screams like it should. 45 plus watts just like you said.Most modulation limiters prevent distortion. However, the one in the SR-94HPC simply prevents good performance. After reading people rave about this radio "having the strong AM audio Stryker is known for", I bought one. What a disappointment. It has the strongest modulation limiter is more like it.
This lack of strong modulation was not acceptable so I looked around for a schematic to no avail. When that didn't work I pulled the board and tried tracing the circuit from the mic input looking for the attenuation transistor. This board may be three layers because lots of traces disappear from the top of the board to the bottom. Like connections must be happening in the middle.
When that failed, out came the scope to trace the audio from transistor to transistor. Luckily, the desired one is on the top of the board. On the extreme front edge of of the board to the right of the white ribbon cable is a transistor. Two legs face the front edge of the board while one faces the rear. It's the leg on the right front edge of the board we are concerned with.
Solder a 470 ohm resistor to the pin on the bottom, right side of the transistor and ground the other side of the resistor. You could use the screw in the right front corner of the board to ground this side of the resistor. This loads the drive triggering the transistor to conduct and was the safest way I could find to increase the range of both AMC controls without defeating the AMC. It will distort if defeated.
Now the radio screams like 45 watts PEP should. Plenty of range on the controls so they can be set on the scope without distortion. If someone wants to post a detailed picture of this area of the board, I'll point out the location of this transistor a bit better. You should remove the ribbon cable and front panel when installing this resistor otherwise the soldering iron may burn both.
Then I did the mod with excellent results. Good job man. Now this radio screams like it should. 45 plus watts just like you said.