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Even Steven July 20th 09 08:45 PM

6F6 heat question
 
I'm working on a Hallicrafters SX-25 Super Defiant. It uses two 6F6
tubes in push pull in the audio
circuit. Boy do they get hot! Too hot to touch. If my finger lingers I'd
have an awful blister in less than a second. Is this normal? I've checked
the tube voltages and they seem to be where they should be...280 VDC on
plate, 6 volts on heater, 18 volts on cathode. Does anyone have any ideas
about how to help these things run cooler?

Steve


Bob Spooner July 20th 09 08:54 PM

6F6 heat question
 
"Even Steven" wrote in message
m...
I'm working on a Hallicrafters SX-25 Super Defiant. It uses two 6F6
tubes in push pull in the audio
circuit. Boy do they get hot! Too hot to touch. If my finger lingers I'd
have an awful blister in less than a second. Is this normal? I've checked
the tube voltages and they seem to be where they should be...280 VDC on
plate, 6 volts on heater, 18 volts on cathode. Does anyone have any ideas
about how to help these things run cooler?

Steve

Steve,
Check the control grid voltages to make sure the bias is right. Sometimes a
leaky capacitor from the previous stage's plate will turn on the following
stage hard. Besides overheating the tubes, this can also burn out the power
transformer. If you haven't replaced all the electrolytic and paper
capacitors, I would suggest you do so before proceeding further.
Regards,
Bob AD3K



Richard Knoppow July 20th 09 10:57 PM

6F6 heat question
 

"Even Steven" wrote in message
m...
I'm working on a Hallicrafters SX-25 Super Defiant. It
uses two 6F6 tubes in push pull in the audio
circuit. Boy do they get hot! Too hot to touch. If my
finger lingers I'd have an awful blister in less than a
second. Is this normal? I've checked the tube voltages and
they seem to be where they should be...280 VDC on plate, 6
volts on heater, 18 volts on cathode. Does anyone have any
ideas about how to help these things run cooler?

Steve


While I agee with Bob Spooner that you should check the
grid voltage (should be at ground potential) my experience
with 6F6 and other metal power tubes is that they run very
hot and its pretty much normal for them to be hotter than
you can touch.
If the grid coupling caps are leaky they will put some
positive volage on the grid. This will make the tube run hot
but will also usually produce very noticable distortion. Use
a very high impedance meter to make this measurement.
Again, hot power tubes are normal.



--
Richard Knoppow
Los Angeles
WB6KBL




Scott Dorsey July 21st 09 12:02 AM

6F6 heat question
 
Even Steven wrote:
I'm working on a Hallicrafters SX-25 Super Defiant. It uses two 6F6
tubes in push pull in the audio
circuit. Boy do they get hot! Too hot to touch. If my finger lingers I'd
have an awful blister in less than a second. Is this normal? I've checked
the tube voltages and they seem to be where they should be...280 VDC on
plate, 6 volts on heater, 18 volts on cathode. Does anyone have any ideas
about how to help these things run cooler?


If the quiescent cathode voltage is good, you can rule out a bias problem
although it might be worth replacing the coupling cap pre-emptively. The
heat tends to bake 'em.

About all you can do is remove the 6F6 and put in a tube with a higher
dissipation rating.
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

COLIN LAMB July 21st 09 12:37 AM

6F6 heat question
 
If the cathode resistor is the correct value, and the voltage across it is
correct, then the power drawn by the tube is correct. The tubes are running
Class A and so over half of the power consumed is dissipated by the tubes
(divide by 2 of course). You can increase the cathode resistance or
increase the screen resistor, to reduce power. This could cause a mismatch
in the output transformer ratio, but being Class A, it should still sound
fine.

Generally, what I would expect you would be seeing (actually, feeling) is a
combination of small factors. The filament voltage is probably above 6.5
and the plate and screen voltage may be a little above specified. This is
because we have a higher line voltage. Often, you have to think about
incremental improvement, rather than night and day. If you drop the
filament voltage about .5 volts, you will decrease heat from the tubes by 1
watt.

Also, adding a small muffin fan can do wonders to remove heat from those old
metl boxes.

73, Colin K7FM



Engineer[_2_] July 21st 09 02:11 AM

6F6 heat question
 
On Jul 20, 3:45*pm, "Even Steven" wrote:
* * *I'm working on a Hallicrafters SX-25 Super Defiant. It uses two 6F6
tubes in push pull in the audio
circuit. Boy do they get hot! Too hot to touch. If my finger lingers I'd
have an awful blister in less than a second. Is this normal? I've checked
the tube voltages and they seem to be where they should be...280 VDC on
plate, 6 volts on heater, 18 volts on cathode. Does anyone have any ideas
about how to help these things run cooler?

* * Steve


I "tube roll" various 6K6's, 6F6's and 6V6's through vintage radios
(checking the bias, of course, but not 6L6's - too big!) and they all
run very hot - far too hot to touch! The metal ones seem worse for
burns.
But, -18 volts seems a bit high for a class AB P-P stage bias... no
need for class A. There might be a positive g1 - you should check
that the audio coupling cap from the previous stage is good. It
should permit no more than, say, +5 mV on the o/p tube g1.
Regardless, I always change this cap for a modern, high voltage, 0.05
uF.
Cheers,
Roger

William H. Bowen July 21st 09 03:06 AM

6F6 heat question
 
"Richard Knoppow" wrote:


"Even Steven" wrote in message
om...
I'm working on a Hallicrafters SX-25 Super Defiant. It
uses two 6F6 tubes in push pull in the audio
circuit. Boy do they get hot! Too hot to touch. If my
finger lingers I'd have an awful blister in less than a
second. Is this normal? I've checked the tube voltages and
they seem to be where they should be...280 VDC on plate, 6
volts on heater, 18 volts on cathode. Does anyone have any
ideas about how to help these things run cooler?

Steve


While I agee with Bob Spooner that you should check the
grid voltage (should be at ground potential) my experience
with 6F6 and other metal power tubes is that they run very
hot and its pretty much normal for them to be hotter than
you can touch.
If the grid coupling caps are leaky they will put some
positive volage on the grid. This will make the tube run hot
but will also usually produce very noticable distortion. Use
a very high impedance meter to make this measurement.
Again, hot power tubes are normal.


I'll agree with both the previous posters - check the caps on the
control grids of the 6F6s. BUT that having been said, as I remember it
the 6F6s in my old SX-25 got hot enough I could keep my coffee cup
warm on them. Those old metal beam power pentodes like the 6F6 and 6L6
would burn your finger very quickly.

I do not remember the company for sure (possibly Millen?) but back in
the 50s and 60s a company made slide-on heat dissipators for the metal
shell octal tubes. I had a piar of them installed on the 6F6s in my
old SX-25. Touch base with any "old timers" you know and see if they
have a couple of them stashed in their junk box.

Best Regards,

Bill Bowen
Sacramento, CA

Newsreader July 21st 09 10:11 AM

6F6 heat question
 
Many years ago I remember having a receiver that used a metal 6V6 in the
audio output.
It ran stinking hot so I replaced it with a 6V6G.
This ran much cooler!



Bob Spooner July 21st 09 02:48 PM

6F6 heat question
 
"COLIN LAMB" wrote in message
m...
If the cathode resistor is the correct value, and the voltage across it is
correct, then the power drawn by the tube is correct. The tubes are
running Class A and so over half of the power consumed is dissipated by
the tubes (divide by 2 of course). You can increase the cathode
resistance or increase the screen resistor, to reduce power. This could
cause a mismatch in the output transformer ratio, but being Class A, it
should still sound fine.

Generally, what I would expect you would be seeing (actually, feeling) is
a combination of small factors. The filament voltage is probably above
6.5 and the plate and screen voltage may be a little above specified.
This is because we have a higher line voltage. Often, you have to think
about incremental improvement, rather than night and day. If you drop the
filament voltage about .5 volts, you will decrease heat from the tubes by
1 watt.

Also, adding a small muffin fan can do wonders to remove heat from those
old metl boxes.

73, Colin K7FM

Colin,
Do they actually run class A even though the output stage is push-pull?
73, Bob AD3K



stan July 21st 09 05:19 PM

6F6 heat question
 
On Jul 21, 11:48*am, "Bob Spooner" wrote:
"COLIN LAMB" wrote in message

m...



If the cathode resistor is the correct value, and the voltage across it is
correct, then the power drawn by the tube is correct. *The tubes are
running Class A and so over half of the power consumed is dissipated by
the tubes (divide by 2 of course). *You can increase the cathode
resistance or increase the screen resistor, to reduce power. *This could
cause a mismatch in the output transformer ratio, but being Class A, it
should still sound fine.


Generally, what I would expect you would be seeing (actually, feeling) is
a combination of small factors. *The filament voltage is probably above
6.5 and the plate and screen voltage may be a little above specified.
This is because we have a higher line voltage. *Often, you have to think
about incremental improvement, rather than night and day. *If you drop the
filament voltage about .5 volts, you will decrease heat from the tubes by
1 watt.


Also, adding a small muffin fan can do wonders to remove heat from those
old metl boxes.


73, *Colin *K7FM


Colin,
Do they actually run class A even though the output stage is push-pull?
73, Bob AD3K- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Good question. Also if there is 18 volts across the cathode resistor
and it measures within limits (immediately after switching off i.e.
hot) that will allow calculation of the cathode current being drawn by
the tube or tubes.


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