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Randy or Sherry Guttery wrote:
Depends on the type of tube -and the service it's in. For instance - many large transmitter tubes are run at 100% filament voltage for their 1st 100 hours - then reduced to (usually) 92% and run until their emission starts falling off The reason for dropping a high power transmitter tube's heater voltage when running under power is to compensate for the heat added to the cathode by the anode current, and the reflected heat from a toasty hot plate. The hot anode acts like an oven surrounding the heater, and as such forces its temperature up. If you don't reduce the heater voltage from the nominal value, the heater will overheat, and cathode life will be reduced. -Chuck |
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