Reviving a Dead Geiger Counter I purchased a Victoreen CDV700 geiger counter on EBay, the unit looked good in the photos, but had a number of electrical and mechanical problems. Here's what I had to do to get a functioning device: The counter had been exposed to water while running, this caused the high voltage traces on the circuit board to turn green with corrosion, the dual trimmer potentiometer was badly corroded, and the driver transistor was fried. Also, the meter movement was broken. Luckily, the transformers, coils, and geiger tube were in good shape, those parts are difficult or impossible to replace. I had a similar meter in my junk pile, a wooden spacer had to be cut and painted to allow the replacement meter to fit in the case. The replacement meter has no calibration marks, it is not very important on this device, thanks to the addition of the numerical counter (CARL) box. The trimmers were replaced, I soldered modern trimmers to the bottom of the circuit board. One of the original trimmers was a 8K value, that was replaced with a 10K pot. The other trimmer was a common 100K value, a direct replacement was made. The original dual trimmer assembly must have been a custom part, it would be difficult to find a replacement. The corroded circuit board was scraped clean with a wire brush and an Xacto knife. The AC high voltage connection between the oscillator transformer and the high voltage rectifier continued to have arcing problems. I unsoldered the transformer lead and wired it directly to the diode, bypassing the problem entierely. The oscillator transistor was changed to a common 2N3906, a TIP42 transistor can also be used, it has a higher power rating than the 2N3906. Due to the higher gain of the 2N3906, it was necessary to add a 1K resistor in series with the 10K oscillator adjustment trimmer to optimize the adjustment range. After reviving the high voltage supply, the 0.01uF, 1000V high voltage filter capacitor developed a short, the capacitor had to be replaced. The geiger probe wire had seen a lot of use, a short circuit had developed where the wire exited the probe assembly. The probe assembly had to be rebuilt. A BNC connector was added to the end of the probe wire and to the counter case. This experience shows is why a $100 "working" counter may be a better deal than a $50 "as is" counter. -FC