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Electronics help needed


johnie

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Can anyone with an understanding of electronics help me? I'm trying to fix an old garage door style remote control.


A component has snapped off the circuit board, and I'm not sure what it is. I think it may be the transmitter crystal or something. It has (had) two legs - these have snapped. It is labelled 57.768 UNI 97 - A. I've attached a couple of photos. The component sat next to the green thing in the area labelled X1.


Thanks for any help.

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Hi Johnie. X refers to a crystal. It determines the frequency that the circuit resonates at so that it only operates the appropriate receiver. Without further investigation I would guess it has a frequency of 57.768MHz which are the numbers on the can. Hope it helps.
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Thanks all for your help! From my research so far I've not found anything with the 57.768MHz frequency, but I'll press on.


Graham, I had considered that, but the breaks are so clean there is nothing to solder to, at least not with my rubbish skills and failing eyesight.

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You could always try a bit of surgery on the can to gain access; even buy a few of the type to experiment with first.


Speaking of which, I'm thinking of trying to replace a few suspect capacitors on my PC's motherboard, after it ceased functioning without any obvious cause. But I'd prefer get some practice first. Does anyone have a derelict motherboard they don't want that I could use?

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I would have thought yo would be able to buy an entire replacement zapper for less than a tenner on ebay or similar. Is there any text on the casing that would indicate what make / frequency it is?


I did this once with a replacement for an electric gate remote and all I had to do was put a battery in and set the switches numbered 1 to 10 to the same position as the old remote

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Hi Bargee


The remotes are for security shutters on an office block. There are two working remotes and this broken one, so I can't modify the receiver. But a good suggestion.


Hi Abe


Yes, you would have thought so, but no such joy. The shutters are about 30 years old I think. The fact I can't find a crystal with the 57.768 anywhere makes me think it may be a red herring, as I have found a couple of 7.68 Mhz ones (at 44p with ?12.50 postage!).


Does anyone know if there is some way to measure the frequency from one of the working remotes?

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johnie Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Hi Bargee

>

> The remotes are for security shutters on an office

> block. There are two working remotes and this

> broken one, so I can't modify the receiver. But a

> good suggestion.

>

> Hi Abe

>

> Yes, you would have thought so, but no such joy.

> The shutters are about 30 years old I think. The

> fact I can't find a crystal with the 57.768

> anywhere makes me think it may be a red herring,

> as I have found a couple of 7.68 Mhz ones (at 44p

> with ?12.50 postage!).

>

> Does anyone know if there is some way to measure

> the frequency from one of the working remotes?


Hi Jonnie. I have a device that does just that.


http://mklec.com/image/cache/data/etc/gooit_frequency_counter-7-500x500.jpg


You are welcome to borrow it. You will need to supply a PP3 9v battery


DulwichFox

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