[Boatanchors] Ques on vacuum tube storage/aging?
David Harmon
K6XYZ at comcast.net
Fri May 14 14:19:35 EDT 2004
Steve.....this site has a lot of really good info that will answer your
questions by an extremely knowledgeable person.
I was on his site earlier this morning studying up on parasitics....or
lack of them in amps that go boom and spray broken parts.
http://www.w8ji.com/
Regards
Dave Harmon
NSRCA 586
K6XYZ[at]comcast[dot]net
Torrance, Ca.
-----Original Message-----
From: boatanchors-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:boatanchors-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Steve Uhrig
Sent: Friday, May 14, 2004 10:39 AM
To: boatanchors at mailman.qth.net
Subject: [Boatanchors] Ques on vacuum tube storage/aging?
Hi all,
Recently I ran across an article on the web which I did not bookmark,
written by a gentleman who had a PA tube in an amplifier fail
apparently from having been in storage for a decade or more. His
claim was the hermetic (glass to metal) seals around the pins aren't
perfect and oxygen molecules leaked in making it gassy.
He theorized if the tube is operated periodically it will last much
longer because the getter will absorb a few oxygen molecules which
leak in, but if left stagnant for too long, too much oxygen will leak
in, more than the getter can absorb, and make the tube gassy.
I entered electronics about the time things were transitioning from
tubes to solid state. I know laser tubes need to be operated
periodically to keep them happy as their seals leak, and it's well
known the Nanao CRT ICOM used in their R9000 receiver went bad with
calendar time as well as hours of use. But I don't know how small
signal tubes fare in this manner.
And I thought the getter was fired once when the tube was
manufactured, did it's thing in milliseconds and that was it. What's
the story on this? Does the getter continue to absorb oxygen? If so,
does the getter need heat to function?
Should I pull the precious older stuff out of deep storage and run it
periodically, like my novice Drake 2B receiver? I am aware of the
capacitor issue and reforming them, of course, but I'm asking about
the tubes here.
My friend who restores lovely 1930 and later vintage consumer
receivers has used NOS tubes from pre - WW2 days and had no problems.
I have also, but it's been a good while since I did enough with
things to remember any bad tubes, and then I could test them at the
drugstore.
What say anyone on this? Several of us are curious. With some tubes
becoming an expensive commodity, I don't want them to die in storage.
20 years from now I may need one to replace in my 2B.
Tks ... Steve WA3SWS
*******************************************************************
Steve Uhrig, SWS Security, Maryland (USA)
Mfrs of electronic surveillance equip
mailto:Steve at swssec.com website http://www.swssec.com
tel +1+410-879-4035, fax +1+410-836-1190
"In God we trust, all others we monitor"
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