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On Jun 26, 4:58*pm, "Richard Knoppow" wrote:
"BH" wrote in message ... On Jun 25, 7:12 pm, wrote: The following web page shows several photos of vacuum tubes that glow because they’re either gassy or induce florescence in the their glass bulbs. Although the English is a little choppy, the narrative and pictures are informative: http://www.jacmusic.com/html/article...w/blueglow.htm The author claims he’s revived gassy tubes by re-heating the getters. Has anyone tried this? -Dave Drumheller, K3WQ Sounds like hog wash. No blue or blue in tubes is probably normal. Magenta is probably gas. * * *Its very common to see a blue glow on the envelope when there is fairly high voltage on the tube. I've forgotten the mechanism but its not gas. Gas can cause a glow between elements. * * *AFAIK, there is no way to re-flash the getter. -- --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA Usually take as the tube has gone soft , slight air leak over the years ? soft vlave = soft vac , slight residual gas .. so assume 'gone' soft taken as loss of vac ?.. or may be impurity's in the metal have boiled out due to over heating ? G .. |
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