painting tubes black for heat disposal???
spamhog wrote:
Dull, black, heat resistant paints
have been used to help cool engines for ages.
It would be cool (literally) if one could
spray and heat-cure unshielded tubes
and improve their heat-shedding
Is there any indication that such paints,
or some vacuum-tube specific types,
would help keeping tubes cool
by improving heat radiation?
I'd love some factual info, if it exists, or educated guesses,
rather than uninformed blind guesses,
as I am awfully good at doing uninformed blind guesses already! :-)
One might think that the metal shields would "catch" the radiated heat
after it has left the tube. I feel that the black paint would act as a
heat insulator, preventing efficient transfer of the filament heat to
the outside. Unless you can put a thermocouple in the tube, it will be
hard to know how hot it gets Inside. (Yes, it can be done, despite the
"how to build a triode" nonsense. Tubes were fabricated and evacuated
with mercury pumps by amateurs in the 19 'teens and 20's).
And will it make any difference? Most equipment was designed to operate
over a rather wide range of ambient temperature. Heat dispersion might
be important with power tubes (rectifiers, audio/rf amplifiers), but
most of that is due to the power inefficiencies of operating the
tube,(see the red or white-hot plates!), not from mere filament heat. In
that case fans or liquid cooling would be a better alternative. Try
painting a 3-500 tube black and fire it up!
--afcsman
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