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Ed wrote:
SNIPPED Is there a particular reason that you want to use this style of tube? Today it is trivial to make a simple switching power supply that can provide a couple of hundred volts at 98% efficiency, why not make one of them, and use some real tubes? -Chuck OK, good info in your reply, Chuck. My reply to your question (above) will probably elicit a whole lot of comments. I hope they're not too negative! HI HI I am recently retired, and am about to have some extra time on my hands for some construction projects. With the re-surfacing of an old news item about terrorists or certain nations who may attempt to launch a nuclear EMP strike on this country, I was thinking about an old project I had once wished to start many years ago; That is an EMP proof ham rig for 75/40 .... probably CW only, for simplicity sake. So I'm thinking of building a fairly simple tube rig, preferably superhet Rx, with tubes that will run totally on a 12V supply. Assuming that we never have such a terrible thing happen to us, a rig like this would still be fun to use. Following the building of a Rx, I'll probably build a simple one tube TX to match. Hi Ed, I would put the probability of experiencing EMP in our life times at somewhere around zero, but that isn't a good reason not to proceed down the path you are intending to travel. The IC manufacturers suffered a wakeup call back in the 70s when things were pretty hot with the cold war. It became a commonly held belief that virtually all of the electronic devices in the country would fail when faced with a nuclear attack. So, a hustle was begun to harden all of the IC's against EMP. It turned out to be pretty easy to do. All they did was redesign the pads, which are specialized circuits that connect to the outside world, so that they could safely absorb the EMP. It had a beneficial effect on static electricity survival too! So, if you do a good job of keeping the EMP from coupling in through large antennas, power connections, etc. The IC's pads should be able to do the rest. Power FET's are similarily protected, so they should be a good bet in an environment where EMP is a possibility. If you are planning to make a transmitter too, you are going to find that the 12V tubes aren't much help. There are a couple that are called "Power amplifier" tubes. Despite their encouraging name, they were not designed to provide more than about 20 milliwatts. Their purpose was to go between the detector/preamplifier tube, and the DS501 power transistor that was used to drive the speaker. As to designing with the 12V tubes, that shouldn't be a big problem, they behave very similarily to normal tubes. The big issues are high plate resistances, low gains, and low power levels. There is a group of antique military radio collectors that want to play with their radios, but don't want to recap, or permanently modificy the radios in any way. They have done extensive experimentation with running military receivers with plate voltages down around 28V. Their reasoning is that even the worst electrolytic will still perform OK at 1/10th of its normal operating voltage. The radios play...weakly.. but they play. -Chuck |
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