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Ray di Tutto" wrote:
One point you mentioned is very interesting. You wrote that when a tube gets gassy, plate current goes up to the point the plate can turn red hot. I'm no specialist and i would have thought that the gas molecules in the tube would be an obstacle for the electrons so plate current would decrease. Vy 73 de HB9SLV Sorry to be so late getting back to you on this. I had forgotten I left a thread open over here on .boatanchors... What really happens is the gas molecules (atoms) become ionized due to the high plate voltage accelerating the plate- current electrons to energies above their ionization potential (typically 10 - 15 electron volts). When this happens the now-ionized gas becomes a very good conductor (almost a dead short) and the control grid is totally ineffective in limiting the cathode-to-plate current flow. The only thing that can halt the process is the removal of the plate voltage. Unfortunately, there is usually enough energy left in the conduction electrons striking the plate to increase its power dissipation disastrously. This process is actually used to good effect in mercury- vapor rectifiers and thyratrons because that "dead-short" effect means the losses through the conducting tube are low. Both of these devices "fire" (ionize) at some forward voltage and then stay in conduction until the AC driving them reverses polarity. Jim Bromley, K7JEB Glendale, AZ |
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