[Hallicrafters] Components failing with age?
RJB
rjb at lynden.com
Wed Jan 21 16:54:03 EST 2004
IIRC i learned, as an elec engineering student back in the 60's, that the
lifetime of an incandescent lamp bulb varied inversely as the 14th power of
the applied voltage (YIKES!!!). If this is anywhere near true, AND if a
similar law applies to the heaters in vacuum tubes, it has horrible
implications for an overvoltage of even 10% on the life expectancy of yer
average 6BA6 et al :(
At my QTH the line voltage is typically 120-125v.
Bob, Maple Vly, WA
-----Original Message-----
From: hallicrafters-admin at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:hallicrafters-admin at mailman.qth.net]On Behalf Of Duane Fischer,
W8DBF
Sent: Wednesday, January 21, 2004 1:01 PM
To: ARDUJENSKI at aol.com; hallicrafters at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Hallicrafters] Components failing with age?
Based on some testing W9GXJ did several years ago, the higher line voltage
has
a definite effect on all components' transformers, tubes, capacitors,
resistors
and so forth. He made observations about the heat generated, as heat
shortens
life. He found that most sets would operate up to factory design
specifications
running from 100-110 VAC. Hence his firm belief that the line voltage should
be
controlled for all older gear that was never designed to operate on today's
common 125 VAC.
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