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Il giorno martedì 8 novembre 2016 19:12:21 UTC+1, Scott Dorsey ha scritto:
Antonio Vernucci wrote: I have recently built a CW transmitter using a German WWII tube (RS391 by T= elefunken) as final amplifier. The tube operating parameters match very well those shown in the datasheet,= namely: - plate voltage: 1500V - plate current: 150 mA - screen voltage: 400V - screen current: 25mA - suppressor voltage: 0 - grid voltage: -120V - grid current 2.5 mA - output power: 140W I was very satisfied of the transmitter behaviour until I noted that one of= the grids (I cannot determine which one of the three through the glass) su= rrounding the cathode becomes very bright on transmit (sign of very high te= mperature). I am not familiar with the tube. However, if you have grid stoppers in place and a plate choke and you've looked on a wideband scope or spectrum analyzer to see that there's no parasitic oscillation, and you've verified that the screen current is good, it's likely okay. Excessive screen current combined with a hot screen is a big big red flag, but you say your screen current measures okay. What happens if you drop the screen potential a bit? At this point I am wondering whether having a grid working at high temperat= ure is a normal condition and I am then worrying about a non-existent probl= em. That supposition comes from the fact that I can hardly believe that the= screen grid, which has a very light structure, can dissipate 20W without r= eaching a very high temperature. If you have some experience on the issue, please advise. Does the tube datasheet mention this at all? This is a tube that you will find few people familiar with. --scott 73 Tony I0JX Rome, Italy -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." Hi Scott, pleased to read from you after a long time. Just for fun I am building a transmitter using German tubes and components. The Telefunken RS391 is a plain power pentode optimized for suppressor grid modulation, but is not a special tube. It is similar to an RCA 803, just somewhat less powerful than it (110W plate dissipation against 125W of an 803). The transmitter works beautifully, no self-oscillation or other instability signs. All currents and voltages, including the screen current and voltage, are as they should be, no overload whatsoever. The only oddity is that I see a glowing grid on transmit (not sure if it is the control or the screen grid). I tried three different tuvbes, all showing the same effect. As you suggested I tried to decrease the screen voltage, and the grid brightness also decreases. But I do not see why I should decrease the screen voltage if it is well within the specifications limit. An easy conclusion would be that having a glowing grid is normal. But I have some difficulty to accept that (I have never seen a glowing grid). The issue I am raising is not specific to the RS391, but it is of more general applicability. For istance the "typical operation" section of the RCA 803 datasheet reports as normal a screen voltage of 500V and a screen current of 33mA, corresponding to a dissipated power of 16.5W How is it possible - I am asking myself - for a tiny grid immersed in between two high temperature elements (namely the plate and the cathode) to dissipate 16.5W (which is a significant amount of power) without reaching a very high temperature? Does the 803 screen grid also glow? 73 Tony I0JX Rome, Italy |
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