[R-390] R390 progress 6AK5/6AJ5
Cecil Acuff
chacuff at cableone.net
Mon May 2 21:14:09 EDT 2005
I tested the 6AJ5's in an R-390 that's on the bench as part of testing all
the tubes and they all three tested low...not sure they are really bad since
they all tested the same....My sub book does not indicate the 6AK5 to be a
substitute for the AJ...they look a lot alike though!
Cecil...
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dan Merz" <djmerz at 3-cities.com>
To: "'Roy Morgan'" <roy.morgan at nist.gov>; <R-390 at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 7:05 PM
Subject: RE: [R-390] R390 progress 6AK5/6AJ5
> Roy, I'm going the right direction now. Things are looking better. I
> did
> the 31 band exercise to start the 2nd oscill alignment using the scope
> (wasn't able to see much voltage on the grid, low mv range so just kept
> going using the scope). Then I went down to 14 and 7 bands and both tuned
> to very nice waveforms using the trimmer caps and 20 meters really came
> alive. I'll redo all this and the other bands when I get the oscillator
> reassembled and the crystal switch hooked back up to the gear train. I'm
> still looking at the high voltage on the screen grid of osc #2 and think I
> may have that cause figured out. The grid leak resistor has aged to about
> 60 kohms in both oscillators (orig. 47Kohms) and is about the same in both
> oscillators so that doesn't account for the difference between the two
> oscillators. I'll probably replace these anyway. However the screen
> resistor in #2 is 58Kohm (68K orig) and this would tend to make the screen
> voltage higher than spec. In osc #2 the screen resistor has aged to 158
> Kohm (82 Kohm orig.) and this would tend to make the voltage lower. I put
> the 6AJ5 in osc #1 and it lowered the screen there compared to the 6AK5W.
> The conclusion is, the 6AJ5 I have shows lower screen voltage than the
> 6AK5W's. I expect this difference will persist even after I replace the
> aged resistors which I think are the cause of the different screen
> voltages
> of the two oscillators. The 6AJ5 tube I'm using may be a poor example in
> making a general comparison of the two tube types since it didn't test as
> good as the new 6AK5W's that I'm using. Dan
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Roy Morgan [mailto:roy.morgan at nist.gov]
> Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 2:55 PM
> To: Dan Merz
> Subject: RE: [R-390] R390 progress 6AK5/6AJ5
>
> At 05:33 PM 5/2/2005, you wrote:
>>Roy, much thanks for the comments. I concluded from your comments
>>that the multiple peaks that might occur with T402 adjusted with too
>>much inductance are due to occurrence of various harmonics as the
>>trimmer on
>>31 is swept.
>
> Dan,
>
> Most likely, but I would have to mess around with it for a while to be
> more
> sure.
>
>>The goal is to have only the right harmonic there and low enough
>>inductance that the others can't be produced, and only one (at least
>>according to the manual procedure). I'll go with that interpretation
>>and see what falls out when I start alignment.
>
> Ok good.
>
>> The VTVM measurement in the manual is made on the grid of the mixer
>>tube - the oscillator signal is injected to the cathode.
>
> Ah, I have not read that manual for some time.
>
>>The Engineering Report on the 390 says about 10 to 15% of the injection
>>shows up on the grid so I guessed that's what was being measured at the
>>test point specified.
>
> Likely.
>
>> However, in rethinking this, the VTVM measurement is a dc
>>measurement of negative voltage on the grid so probably reflects how
>>the bias on the grid peaks as the various harmonics are produced by the
>>trimmer sweep and not really an integration of the rf voltage that I had
>>in
> mind.
>
> Yes, the mixer produces bias from the oscillator injection voltage. It's
> like a rectifier.
>
>>I've been measuring at the cathode with the scope so far and using the
>>10x probe on the scope.
>
> Good. that should give you good results.
>
>> I don't have a vacuum tube VTVM, but do have a 1 gigohm input
>>impedance "electrometer" that I built for looking at grid voltages. It
>>should work fine as long as we're talking about dc voltages.
>
> Not if the lead from the end of the test probe is a shielded wire with
> lots
> of capacitance. (RG-58 is something like 20 pF per foot.) Put a one meg
> ohm resistor at the probe end and stick that into the test point to see if
> you get the same results.
>
> Roy
>
> - Roy Morgan, K1LKY since 1959 - Keep 'em Glowing!
> 7130 Panorama Drive, Derwood MD 20855
> Home: 301-330-8828 Cell 301-928-7794
> Work: Voice: 301-975-3254, Fax: 301-948-6213 roy.morgan at nist.gov --
>
>
>
>
> _____________________________________________________________
> R-390 mailing list
> Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/r-390
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/faq.htm
> Post: mailto:R-390 at mailman.qth.net
> Unsubscribe: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/options/r-390
More information about the R-390
mailing list