[Boatanchors] Corrosion on tube pins and sockets
Glen Zook
gzook at yahoo.com
Tue Feb 26 11:42:05 EST 2019
I dip the tube pins in Goddard's Silver Dip, or TarnX - same thing, to clean them. That usually takes care of corrosion, etc.
As for loose contacts in tube sockets: Those can usually be tightened by inserting a needle, thin probe, etc., between the insulating medium of the socket and the metal of the contact. Bend the contact towards the middle applying just enough force to tighten the contact. I have been doing this for decades and the procedure works very well.
Glen, K9STH
Website: http://k9sth.net
From: Robert Nickels <ranickel at comcast.net>
To: boatanchors at mailman.qth.net
Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2019 10:29 AM
Subject: Re: [Boatanchors] Corrosion on tube pins and sockets
Tube pins that look crusty get cleaned with a wire brush Dremel tool on
my bench. A few passes around the outside and up in between, good as
new. Tube socket terminals were designed to exert high contact force
and the scraping action when inserting a tube is usually sufficient to
clear off surface crud. Tube pins and sockets weren't designed to need
any magic fluid or lubricant, but carefully applied DeOxit won't hurt.
Just don't go blasting it into tube sockets, especially phenolic ones,
which absorb liquids. The De-Oxit knowledge base has a lot of good
information: http://store.caig.com/s.nl/sc.12/category.3/ctype.KB/KB.218/.f
The bigger problem is when socket pins lose tension, I recently had to
replace several 9 pin miniature tube sockets on a Heathkit singlebander
which had become intermittent - one was so loose that the tube actually
fell out when I turned the radio upside-down. Never ran into that before.
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