Ranger AR-3500

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5thElement
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Ranger AR-3500

Post by 5thElement »

As requested, the Ranger AR-3500

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The AR Ranger 3500 by Clear Channel Corporation was introduced in 1985. The AR Ranger 3500 was the first of it's kind, a 10 meter monoband LED readout, microprocessor controlled
transceiver that features 5 memorys, frequency scan and split operation and is capable of 150 watts output in CW mode and 120 watts ouput in sideband.

This radio uses a microprocessor which can be reprogrammed to expand its frequency limits by useing the buttons on the front of the radio.

Discuss!
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RE: Ranger AR-3500

Post by 26CAB40 »

Had one of these many moons ago.
Taking it below 26.000 Mhz was risky, it required a key combination.
If you pressed the wrong button below that, it locked the radio up, which took some doing to unlock.
Even though, very very good receiver and had a built in speech processor.
"It's worth whatever they're willing to pay"
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RE: Ranger AR-3500

Post by 26bat21paul »

Thanks for posting ... good radio ... i should have never sold it ...i was 26CAT13 at the time and 19 young free and single ... nuff said.
26 BAT 021
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Ranger 2950dx : Adonis AM503G
/ A99 / wife /
kids / dog / gold fish ....
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by jocklet »

Hi, I have both versions of the Ranger AR 3500, the 30 watt version and the 100 watt version. I have owned and used many different radios in the past and in my experience these are one of the best transceivers ever made, the 100 watt version was bought and imported from Australia, it has an 8 pin mic plug on the front with the same wiring/pin out as my Yaesu FT847 so I can use my Yaesu mics with the AR3500 which is extremely useful. If I could fault it in any way it would be the lack of variable power although there is a mod to do this available on the internet I have always been put off attempting it as it means drilling a hole in the radio, as the radio is in almost pristine condition I have never had the stomach to go ahead with it. All in all these are an extremely good radio and are quite rare and sought after now in this country, spares can be a bit of a problem so if anyone has a broken one laying around they would like to part with please get in touch with me via this site, :roll: Malcolm ( Jocklet / 26 AT 351)
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Ashtec »

Hi all i take it that there not a bad rig then i have never seen one before untill a few day's ago when i seen this faulty one on ebay i wanted some think to use for 10 Meters SSB so i brought this one by the look's of the inside of the radio it's been a bit botched up but dont all rig's these day's............................

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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Ashtec »

Hi all im needing a bit of help with a AR3500 i got it off Ebay not to long ago as note working and looking in a bid way. I have set here for some day's now and got it all fully working as a 30watt version as the 100 watt amp had been removed as well as the wireing.
So has any one on here got a diagram of how to wire the 100watt amp back in to the radio so i can finsh this little project off......

Please.........................

:cry: :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry: :cry:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=an6Eu2ny ... re=related

""Here's a Little History On The Clear Channel Corporation People""

Sam Lewis of RF Limited/Clear Channel Corporation contributed some background info on the radio players in the 10 Meter radio market they associated or partnered with going back to 1969. The story is interesting and lends insight to how the 10 Meter radios evolved. Many AR 3300 and AR 3500 owners probably have no idea how deeply dedicated these people are to the radio business. They have strived to produce the best possible product while keeping it in reach of the average radio operator. Other companies broke the price barrier, but none ever matched the performance or operation simplicity of the Clear Channel Corp. Ranger transceiver.

Many people are still confused and think the AR 3300 and AR 3500 were made by RCI (Range Communications Incorporated). This is not true; Clear Channel Corporation developed the Ranger AR 3300 and Ranger AR 3500 and were produced for them by Nissei in Tokyo Japan. On the other hand Ranger Communications Corporation has there own factories in Malaysia and China, The RCI brand is brought in through their American subsidiary. RCI and CCC are two very different companies with different philosophies. RCI produces many other radios for other labels like Galaxy, Superstar, Connex, General, Virage, Mirage, and at one time even Cobra as well as others. Clear Channel on the other hand conceived, designed, and oversaw the production of the AR line of radios. These radios were developed to compete in performance with the big buck HF rigs. These radios were developed to meet the demands of the real amateur radio market as well as the 11 Meter market.

This is how the 10 Meter market evolved. In 1969, Herb Johnson of Swan Engineering produced the Cygnet 260, a 10-80m bare bones transceiver. It was basically a Swan 350-C with much of the circuitry eliminated to better compete with the new Japanese sideband rigs appearing on the market. At this time, CB radio was going great guns. Sam Lewis and his father, of Palomar Electronics, were producing the 546 sideband rig and eventually the Skipper 71, 73, 73B, and private labeled the 1046 for Swan. Herb removed all but 10 Meters from the Cygnet 260, added there most sophisticated VFO circuit, and replaced the final section with a single 6LF6 to increase the power output because the 260 only put out 60-Watts on 10m. He stared selling the radio as the Swan 1011. Sales of the 1011 went through the roof.

Someone else that went through the roof was Johnny Griggs of the west coast head of the ARRL (American Radio Relay League). Inside of six months, Griggs went down to see Herb several times threatening to have the amateur fraternity boycott Swan. Sam Lewis’s dad and Herb cooked up a deal, Swan would not market the radio, they would build the radio a under private label program under the Palomar Siltronix label. During this period, Palomar was also building VFOs for Baggys radio under his “Slider/Scanner” brand. Siltronix took over the marketing and expanded the distribution to their Palomar 2-step distributors. Up until then, the 1011 was only available through Swan amateur dealers.

Swan was bought out buy Cubic Corporation, a San Diego based conglomerate that mainly sold sophisticated communications equipment to the US government and military agencies around the globe. A couple of years after that, Cubic bought Siltronics from Palomar. At that time, Palomar hooked up with Les Ernshaw and started the Kachina project. At the same time, Palomar was in partnership with Communications Power Incorporated (CPI), developing the DigiCom, the first programmable CB radio, until the FCC, under pressure from Cobra and EF Johnson, told them they had to change the circuit, even though they (FCC) type accepted the radio. The partnership lead to the CPI radio and accessory lineup.

In 1980, Palomar died while the10 Meter market faded. However, the Palomar people continued in the amplifier business, making amplifiers for their friend Im, the owner of Sommerkamp. Sommerkamp had the European distribution sewn up. Im was also responsible for putting Yaesu Munsen (YM) on the map in the early 70’s. When he first visited Mr. Hasagowa in Japan, his main business mainly consisted of repairing color TVs in Tokyo. He had built a few sideband radios and was starting to build up sales outside Japan. Meanwhile, in the US a couple of guys started Spectronics East & West. They would drive around LA in a converted ambulance (circa Ghostbusters) delivering radios to anyone with the cash. Im made a deal with Mr. Hasagawa. Im put money into YM, in return, Im got total distribution rights for a specified period and all would bear the Sommerkamp brand. Im showed Mr. Hasagawa the one thing that put YM on the map, how to install the crystal for easy 11 Meter conversion.

Im had an engineer named Mr. Sakamoto in Japan. When the exclusive ran out in the late 70’s, Im had Mr. Sakamoto develop the TS788, Palomar/RF Limited supplied the MRF454 transistors and when the radio was available, RF Limited in exchange got the TS788 exclusive for the Americas. This was when I got involved with RF Limited, repairing Sommerkamp 788 radios.

The 788 was a compact 10/11 Meter transceiver with output power around 70 Watts PEP. The SSB transmission was not the cleanest on the market and there were many problems with the Circuit boards. It was a dual board radio with a wiring harness sandwiched between them. The boards were also phenolic double sided and the feed-thoughs were constantly breaking. Although this was a very innovative radio, it was a nightmare to work on. Im realized the magnitude of the problem and after a while abandoned the project

In 1982, RF Limited started developing the Ranger AR-3300. They wanted a fully computer controlled radio and at that time CMOS was the most readily available. NEC helped them along the way. The designer of the AR-3300 had also worked with Mr. Sakamoto on the TS788. The lead engineer designed the front end for most of the AOR scanners. That’s the main reason the 3300 and 3500 radios have such good front ends. These radios were built by a subcontractor to AOR, Nissei in Tokyo. The first production run was built in January 1984 and delivered in April 1984 and Clear Channel Corporation was born. The radios had warble problems and other issues. This is when they hired an engineer named Vic. Vic came aboard and solved the problems and continued to work for Clear Channel developing options for the AR-3300.

To overcome the low audio in FM, Vic developed the SP-1 speech processor, which works awesome in all modes. In addition, the SP-1a is now manufactured by Bob’s CB. Vic did some audio tailoring on the transmitter for all modes of operation. When you hear a 3300 or 3500, you can hear the results. On a properly tuned AR-3300 or AR-3500, the quality matches that of the most expensive HF rigs.

Then Vic developed the 100 Watt RF amplifier and made changes to the AR-3300 such as RF bypassing to insure clean operation. At that time, we were shuttling evaluation radios across the county from Clear Channel Corp to Bob’s CB and back. I was involved in testing Vic’s changes in different environments and played a small part in some of these ECOs. Then came the AR3500, which incorporated all the engineering changes that Clear Channel was adding in the US. The 100-Watt radios were converted 30-Watt radios, most were done at their facility in Washington State. Bob’s CB immediately became the East Coast Warranty center for Clear Channel certified to do all conversions including the 100-Watt upgrade. I, seeing one shortcoming of the radio, developed the memory NiCad battery backup BB-1.

Later Vic developed the CW-1 CW board with all mode adjustable power. Then he developed the SM-1 scanning mic board, which allowed frequency scanning from the microphone. This is why there are 4-pin and 8-pin wiring codes for the AR-3300 and AR-3500 radios. Any 3300 radios with the 8-pin connector have more than likely been changed during the installation of the SM-1 or SM-2 scanning mic board. During the middle of AR-3500 production, Clear Channel changed over to the 8-pin jack at production to eliminate that time consuming step during the installation of the scanning mic option. Both the CW-1 and SM-1 were improved and upgraded to the CW-2 and SM-2. Both had improved features and reliability.

The latest radios RF Limited brings to the Amateur platform are the Magnum radios, under the Magnum International label. All that needs to be said is the RF Limited folks continue to bring quality products to the communications market.
Last edited by Ashtec on 01 Mar 2011, 23:54, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Ashtec »

Cbtrick's has all the info on the radio but there is note about the amp at all only to set the power output of it................
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Otter »

I didn't think it was possible, but that thing is uglier than a Ranger 2950.
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by bigpimp347 »

might be ugly but operate below 14mhz with a few keypad tricks...and very sought after..


snakesripoffinc was selling these for silly money recently before he got mardy and went into hiding..

i'd love a 3000 or 3500 but i want one that works and not off a screwdriver monkey if anyone has one :)

black or silver i'm not fussy..!!
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Otter »

bigpimp347 wrote:might be ugly but operate below 14mhz with a few keypad tricks
Um. Is that useful? Is there some tuning mechanism to tune the front end for the lower frequencies or is it completely deaf?

If any come up for sale I won't be bidding against you :lol: you're welcome to it.
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by bigpimp347 »

Not going to cause another argument paul...BUT..!!!

i thought you didn't have an Ebay or paypal account any more due to your lad...

so who's this ????

http://feedback.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI ... ackAsBuyer
I want to Die Asleep like my Grandad did,
Unlike his Passengers, Screaming and Shouting.!
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Ashtec »

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Last edited by Ashtec on 03 Mar 2011, 04:30, edited 9 times in total.
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Ashtec »

Otter wrote:I didn't think it was possible, but that thing is uglier than a Ranger 2950.
Funney you put that i all so think the same about the president lincoln's :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

I my self like the look's of this radio to the Ranger 2950dx i think with some of these older 10 meter radio's they spent a bit more cash on the inside than spending cash on the fronts and look's of them..........................

;) ;) ;) ;) ;) ;) ;) ;) ;) ;) ;) ;)
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Ashtec »

bigpimp347 wrote:might be ugly but operate below 14mhz with a few keypad tricks...and very sought after..


snakesripoffinc was selling these for silly money recently before he got mardy and went into hiding..

i'd love a 3000 or 3500 but i want one that works and not off a screwdriver monkey if anyone has one :)

black or silver i'm not fussy..!!

I think you can get them down to 2.5 mhz what they are like down there i dont know as far as ive found out A O R designed the receiver side of the radio and we all know how good AOR radio scanners are dont we i must admint the receiver side of this radio is much better that my Yaesu FT1000 and the FT767.............................
A dam good radio in my eyes...........................
Last edited by Ashtec on 03 Mar 2011, 01:51, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Ranger AR-3500

Post by Ashtec »

I like how you put that BP screwdriver monkey been in it was that aimed at me.....................

Well some one had been in there be for me :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

As you can see from the pic's i posted up on here she was in a very bad way she wasnt txing and the receiver side of the radio was poor the mic plug wire's had been cut and heat shrinked up the blue thing in the pic was a diy 12v battery for backup.
some one had been playing about in the final section and blow the output transistors as well as that the b754 regulator had no leg's as well as that some of the coupling capacitor values was well out and was shorting the tx line as well as the rx line to ground thats why the receiver side of the radio was very poor but ive sorted all that out and it work's well.
I put the radio on test with some 2sc1969's in it and a regulator and it worked well for saying it's been played about with
So now ive oreded a new set of 2sc2312's to go back in to the radio all so the b754 regulator i dont know what to do about the 100 watt unit ive found how it wires up now after looking at pic's and zooming in on them i must say there's no good pic's of the insided of one any were i can tell ya..................
But the in side of the 100 watt rf unit dont look to well as some one has been in there playing about as well as very bad soldering so i dont know if to just have the radio as a 30watt version and just fit a heat sink to the back of the radio and be done with it.
once the parts get here im sending it off for a full alignment to A TM1 uniden fan to make sure it's spot on on side band as this is were it will be working most of the time thats if i dont find some think else to use on there.
And before you say it BP some of my kit has give up the gost and need's renewing so im going out to get all new test gear as soon as ive moved house...................................

But i must say BP there not a bad radio at all and a good radio to have in your collection there's a few about here and there and there's load's in the usa so i dont think it will be to hard to fined one i bet now we have done some posting's about this one we will see more on ebay you watch i all ways fined this....................
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