[R-390] HP410B rectifier tubes
Barry
n4buq at knology.net
Sun Mar 26 17:02:26 EST 2006
I had a chance to do a little more testing. It seems the diode is only
pulling about 11 microamps (depending on the accuracy of my meter) which is
not correct (should be 500 microamps). I'm seeing approximately 6.3VAC at
the socket and the tube itself has slight resistance across its filament so
I must have something else going on. Looks like another "project".
Barry - N4BUQ
----- Original Message -----
From: <n4buq at knology.net>
To: <r-390 at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Tuesday, March 21, 2006 8:06 AM
Subject: [R-390] HP410B rectifier tubes
> Many of you own the HP410B VTVM and use them on your R39* series radios.
I
> have one and some time ago, I noticed the AC probe stopped working.
> Normally, after an hour or so, the probe will become warm due to the
> rectifier tube's filament and mine had stopped warming up.
>
> Figuring the diode in the AC probe had died, I recently started looking
for
> a replacement diode. As many of you also know, these tubes are becoming
> quite expensive. Knowing this, I decided to check everything out as the
> tube itself may not really be the problem.
>
> Some of the meters use a 2-01C diode, some use an EA53, and others may
have
> a probe where either type can be used (there are supposedly slight
physical
> differences between the two tubes making them not completely
> interchangeable). Mine has an EA53 and I checked the specs for it. I
> noticed that the 2-01C uses a 5.0VAC filament while the EA53 runs on
> 6.3VAC. Checking in my manual, it states to set the filament voltage to
> 5.0VAC and that was what I did when I went through it a few years ago.
>
> A little reading on the internet reveals that if your meter uses an EA53,
> you should set the heater voltage to 6.3VAC, not 5.0VAC and some manuals
> may even make mention of this (mine does not).
>
> There is a variable resistor used with a ballast tube to set the heater
> voltage. I set the heater voltage at the probe to 6.3VAC and reinserted
> the EA53. I let it warm up for about an hour and, sure enough, the probe
> began to warm up again. It is again working in the AC modes; however, it
> reads quite low (about 30VAC where it should be seeing 120VAC). I think
> this is just a calibration thing and I can fix that.
>
> I just thought I'd pass this along in case others may have experienced
non-
> working AC probes and not realizing it may just be an incorrect heater
> voltage setting. Check the diode in your probe first, though!
>
> Barry - N4BUQ
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