Martin,
Sorry for not getting back to you sooner, and many thanks for the advice. I eventually got around to pulling the top off and having a good look at the Tuner power supply circuit.
It is fed from the 60v supply and TR10 (BC212L-B PNP) appears to be the controlling device. The 22v Zener diode (Item 138) that you described (which is marked ITT ZF22) goes from the TR10 Collector to Ground (0v), while another Zener diode (9.1v Item 137) goes from +60v to the TR10 Base.
The Base is linked to 0v by a 33kΩ resistor (Item 139) and the Emitter is linked to +60v by a 2.2 kΩ resistor (item 136). The nominal 22v supply current is therefore also regulated by the action of the 9.1v Zener which biases TR10’s base. The current supply (at nominal 22v) passes through another 2.2 kΩ resistor (item 143) to reach the top of the set of 0.1 MΩ trimpots that provide the tuning action.
I removed the clamp holding the 22v Zener diode and also unsoldered the diode from the terminals, in order to carefully clean the diode, clamp and RF casing of any of the old heat-transfer compound and re-make the soldered joints. You were right, what was left of the compound was dry and cracked and probably wasn’t transferring much heat at all.
I then “tweaked” the clamp so that it would hold the diode firmly against the casing (it was a slightly loose before) and then re-assembled the diode, clamp & screw to the casing with new heat-transfer compound .
I thought a long test was in order so I put a couple of meters on to monitor the voltages at the 22v Zener and at the top of the trimpots (lower end of 2.2 kΩ resistor item 143) over time. The results are below, note that the voltage at the top of the trimpots was varying (oscillating) between the two values, rather than exactly steady. I assume that small variation is something to do with the switching within TR10, do you have a view on that?.
Switch on (T0) 21.64v 18.77-18.79v
T0 +18 mins 21.65v 18.78-18.80v
T0 +80 mins 21.67v 18.79-18.81v
T0 +3 hrs 21.67v 18.78-18.81v
T0 +5 hrs 21.69v 18.79-18.82v
Since then, the FM radio seems to be able to hold tune on a given station for a significant time, whereas before this it used to wander off after 10 minutes or so. If you know of any possible failure modes in the RF section (electrolytic capacitors etc??) I would be most interested for preventive maintenance.
So it appears that your suggestion about the diode was correct. Many thanks for that and a happy New Year for 2012.
Regards
Richard