[ARC5] Restoring rusty metal tubes

MICHAEL BITTNER mmab at cox.net
Wed Sep 15 14:19:51 EDT 2021


Besides auto parts stores, I've also found heat resistant semi-gloss black spray paint at BBQ Grill & Supplies stores.

I have used "Evapo-Rust" rust remover as advertised by Rick Dale on the TV show "American Restoration".  It is not a rust converter but literally dissolves rust down to the bare metal and works well.  However, you would have to be extra careful to prevent this liquid from getting into the crack between the metal tube shield and the Bakelite tube base where it could damage the connections to the tube pins.

Mike W6MAB

> On September 15, 2021 at 1:53 PM Leslie Smith <lnsmith99 at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>     Thanks to those who replied so far.  I will pick a 'donor' tube and wire a primitive test rig.  I don't have a real tube-tester.  I figure tubes are much tougher than we often imagine.  I think that tube living in a B-17 (or whatever - full of vibration) for many hours were tough.   I don't know if the command sets lived in PBYs, but that may be even more demanding.   (Maybe the 'tubes' wore ear-plugs.  That way life would more pleasant.)
> 
>     I don't think I can save the marking on some tubes - but if I can get an elegant polished black tube with hand-written ident - I've got something better than what you see in the snapshot.  The snapshot is true to life.  (Hope it comes thru)
> 
>     After testing I will give it a working over with a nylon abrasive scrubber we have here called scotch-brite.  Sheet-metal workers use it for polishing steel.  Then a metal undercoat and a gloss top coat.  Then some Johnson's floor-was. 
> 
>     Now I'm going off-topic.  Here is a link to a home-brew regen receiver project. 
>     https://people.ohio.edu/postr/bapix/Regen_HB.htm
>     Since the first time I saw this web-page I wanted to try a beam tetrode in the role of regen detector. 
>     Here is a comment from the link above: 
>     ""I did get some difference when I used a 6V6 vs something like the 24 or 6SK7, in that the current through the circuits was higher giving higher effective gain at low voltages from the beam pentodes as compared to the normal RF pentodes.I am not why certain power tubes might have been used in detector service other then possibly as ''power detectors'' where there is a fair amount of current flowing in the detector to get less square-law detection."
> 
>     I may add a solid state "back end" in place of the second tube.  eBay has dozens of ads for small AF amps.  I bought 2 unassembled kits recently.  I think some-one must have a 44 gallon drum of LM386 chips they want to get rid of.   One kit I bought came with LM-386-1; the second had LM-386-M.  In both kits some holes were too small to take the input jack.  The circuit is set up for a (voltage) gain of x200.  I reduced that to x50.  That gives useful volume with 5mV signal in.  (Had to cut a track to do that - but hey!  That's fine.)  10mW is useful volume and high-Z 'phones are getting scarce these days.
>     The tube in a regen set shouldn't get too hot.
>     BTW, here some photos of a nicely restored AR-7 by McNaughton.
>     Link:  http://www.macnaughtonart.com/ar7_restoration.htm
> 
>     Very nice.
>     Best wishes fr. AU
> 
>     Leslie
> 
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