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#31
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Richard is quite correct, tho to older hams, believe the
term he uses for "Scavengers", were called "GETTERS", and were to claim any free gas's in a tube (this is anchient history!). And, another method that was used , was an "Extender", which was in reality, nothing more than a step- up transformer for the filament, raiseing the voltage (and hence the cathode temperature) by 1 to 2 tenths of a volt. these were also (a variation of this principle) available on telephone microwave carriers , where the klystrons cost several hundreds of $$$ . These, normally set the voltage at 6.3 volts, but you could (at your own risk) turn it as high as 7 volts. But, normally didn't exceed 6.5 volts. and to give an idea just how prudent, the receive local oscillators is some of that equipment, (according to the date codes), lasted in excess of 20 YEARS continious service! It wasn't the phospors that deteriorated, but the free electrons that the cathode could radiate! And, as a side note, Southern Pacific, found an outfit that would replace the filiment/cathode and rebuild those same klystrons , at about 1/4 the price of the new ones- the original equipment was made by Lenkurt , about 1960 vintage and only , about 8 years ago was finally retired, replaced with solid state, mostly digital, but some analog equipment! If this hasn't boored you by now, dont know what it will take! As info, Jim NN7K (really dates me) ! Richard Clark wrote: On Fri, 29 Apr 2005 09:05:27 -0700, "John Smith" wrote: A crt fails/dims due to air entering the tube, possibly? Hi Brett, Principally it is the oxidation of the cathode (one reason why tubes have scavengers) from what air had remained from the production cycle. Snip Back when I did TV repair as a teen, and then later in the Navy as part of a Christmas charity project, we used what was called a "rejuvenator." snip This piece of gear would apply several hundred to a thousand volts between the cathode and the first grid (usually a cylindrical shield capped with a plate with a pinhole in it) and hold the voltage there for a couple of seconds (manufacturer's recommended time). This would produce a current that would rip the surface of the cathode open revealing a new emitting area and the tube would come to life for another 6 months. snip again! 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#32
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Ahhh, the cat... likely someone just forgot to put it out...
Warmest regards, John |
#33
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Indiglo uses an electroluminescent panel that's powered by an inverter.
It takes something like 100V to light it. It's probably the inverter that's causing the RFI. |
#34
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Geneb wrote:
"Indiglo uses an electroluminescent panel that`s powered by an inverter." The whine says you`re right. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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