A second EICO 150, Part 1: This one is a complete mess.

Thursday, June 18, 2026 at 09:35:23

I recently picked up a big lot of test equipment. There was a unique R-C bridge and this EICO 150, both of which I wanted, as well as a couple of old Leader RF generators and a couple of meters. Other than the first two items, most of the stuff was in really poor condition (foreshadowing!) and was of little interest - or was broken beyond repair.

The EICO 150 was the biggest piece I was interested in, as I have one already and wanted to obtain another for comparison and other purposes.

However…as I found out all of this equipment had been modified to extremes over the years. Here’s the front panel:

eico1502-frontpanel-wereboar.jpg

The trim ring on this, while intact in the original pictures, was completely shattered when it arrived. I tried to claim insurance on it, but the seller just said they couldn’t do it as it was all packed in the box. Well…yes, but there was very little packing material for the equipment itself. This stuff was shipped by airline, and got tossed around. All of this stuff was knocked about and this piece in particular was quite smashed.

eico1502-cracked-wereboar.jpg

eico1502-pieces-wereboar.jpg

Fortunately, a friend was able to model a trim ring, and we’re waiting on some gray filament to make a test print. Stay tuned on that one, I’ll post the files as soon as I have them and we’re happy with the quality.

The back was in ok shape, one of the cord mounts was bent. This looks to be a chassis problem and can be knocked back into shape. The cordset, however, is a mess and will need to be replaced.

eico1502-back-wereboar.jpg

Inside, it’s even worse. I could see there were some changes made just by peeking in the hole left by the ring. But to what extent, I have no idea.

eico1502-inside-wereboar.jpg

eico1502-underside-wereboar.jpg

That’s certainly not the OEM amp board. It’s also not the OEM power supply. Everything has been modified. The underside has a bridge rectifier power supply with a few parts just floating in the air. Did they come off their terrible joints, or were they placed like that? I have no idea.

eico1502-amplifierpcb-wereboar.jpg

That’s the amplifier board. It’s using an AN214, an old-school power amp from Panasonic. This one has the Matsushita triangle on it, and of course Panasonic was one of their imprints. It commonly showed up in low-power consumer electronics, and is usually rated around 4W. This board probably came out of such a device, but who knows. It’s obviously pretty old.

eico1502-atlcap-wereboar.jpg

That’s not supposed to be there. It’s an across-the-line capacitor and looks to have come from an old radio or television of the 1960s. Soldering is poor to terrible on all of these connections.

Pretty much all of the switches have been cleaned of their connections.

eico1502-switches-wereboar.jpg

The meter drive is similarly messy.

eico1502-meterdrive-wereboar.jpg

Even the power transformer has been changed out. If the label on the top is correct, it says 15V 1A, which is much less than the higher voltage unit originally present.

eico1502-transformer-wereboar.jpg

So…the million dollar question. Does this thing actually work?

Yes. It does, and is actually very quiet - i.e. no noise. This amp board is quite well made.

I want to make this thing work properly, so it’s going on the bench at some point. There’s a lot of cleanup, and I may lay out a board for it, just to see what I can do.

Stay tuned!

Next part of this series: https://wereboar.com … t-2-a-new-trim-ring/

References

Manual: https://wereboar.com … 0and%20Parts.pdf.zip

YouTube feed: https://www.youtube. … yAcib71v-995pS_-4jDr

The YouTube feed is for both the original device and this one. Videos are still being posted to this list.

Trim ring stepfile: https://wereboar.com … 0trim%20ring.stp.zip

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