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Old April 12th 04, 05:05 AM
Mike Knudsen
 
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In article , Alan Douglas
adouglasatgis.net writes:

Any tester made after, say, 1950 will probably use a lower grid
signal than 5V. The lower the better, for low-bias tubes like the
12AX7.


I'll bet my 1928 Hickok really "slams" that grid signal. It's so old that it
has a 5-pin adapter with grid cap for them new-fangled screen-grid tubes,
tetrodes or whatever they called 'em.

It seems to use a wattmeter type of meter movement (dual coils) to multiply and
correlate the grid drive nad plate output to compute the gm. Very cute unit.
--Mike K.

Oscar loves trash, but hates Spam! Delete him to reply to me.
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Old April 13th 04, 10:23 PM
Alan Douglas
 
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Hi,

Any tester made after, say, 1950 will probably use a lower grid
signal than 5V. The lower the better, for low-bias tubes like the
12AX7.


I'll bet my 1928 Hickok really "slams" that grid signal. It's so old that it
has a 5-pin adapter with grid cap for them new-fangled screen-grid tubes,
tetrodes or whatever they called 'em.

It seems to use a wattmeter type of meter movement (dual coils) to multiply and
correlate the grid drive and plate output to compute the gm. Very cute unit.
--Mike K.


Oddly enough, that model (AC-47) uses a 2.5VAC grid signal. And
yes, it uses a dynamometer meter movement that measures AC
milliamperes directly (6.25mA F.S.). It also has a DC plate
milliammeter.

73, Alan
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