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Antonio Vernucci wrote:
pleased to read from you after a long time. Thank you, it is good to see you here! 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 s= omewhat less powerful than it (110W plate dissipation against 125W of an 80= 3). With an 803, I would not expect to see that behaviour... but this is not an 803. The grid structures are likely different. 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.=20 If the currents are in the ballpark, and it's not oscillating, and the load is good, then you have done everything you can do, I think. It is likely a design issue with the tube and it might shorten the tube lifetime, but that might just be how that tube is. An easy conclusion would be that having a glowing grid is normal. But I hav= e some difficulty to accept that (I have never seen a glowing grid). =20 Yes, I don't like it. I have seen glowing grids before, but only when something was wrong. There are a lot of tubes that will draw excessive screen current and have a very obvious screen glow... but they won't do that for very long until the screen melts and sags. The issue I am raising is not specific to the RS391, but it is of more gene= ral applicability. For istance the "typical operation" section of the RCA 8= 03 datasheet reports as normal a screen voltage of 500V and a screen curren= t of 33mA, corresponding to a dissipated power of 16.5W How is it possible - I am asking myself - for a tiny grid immersed in betwe= en two high temperature elements (namely the plate and the cathode) to diss= ipate 16.5W (which is a significant amount of power) without reaching a ver= y high temperature? Does the 803 screen grid also glow?=20 The 803 screen grid does not glow, or at least not to the point where it is obvious and visible. But it does dissipate a considerable amount of screen power, and the screen is designed for that. If I were you, I wouldn't worry about it because I don't think there is anything you can do about it that you haven't done already. But if I were you, I'd be using an 833. Or maybe a 6AQ5.... I have 90 DXCC countries now with the 6AQ5 as a final... but those last 10 are proving to be difficult... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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