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My 2 cents on tube testers is that they are marginally useful for everyday
work unless you are heavily into restoration. I have restored many tube radios, and a dozen or so tube TVs. I own several tube testers, basically because I like old test equipment. But in the everyday world, they are only used to quickly test for dud/very weak tubes when I get in a new item. You can test for duds by measuring continuity between the tube's filament pins with an ohmmeter. If you don't have a tube manual, you can look up the tube's basing diagram (i.e., pinout) at http://www.nostalgiaair.org/Tubes/ . For many consumer radios, a tube that tests "maybe" on even a cheap emission-type tester will still work just fine. Why? Because those radios were made with wide design tolerances, and many of them weren't that demanding in the first place. If you replace that "maybe" tube with a brand-new one that tests "A-1" on a $1000 tester, the radio may work exactly the same as before. The only difference is that you have wasted money buying a tube you didn't need. Some circuits in TVs and complex boatanchors will be more fussy about a tube's performance, but it sounds like you're not at the level of worrying about such things. The best test for any tube is to try it in an actual working circuit doing the job for which it was designed. If you have some working restored radios in the house, and one of them happens to use tube type whatever, substitute your suspect tube type whatever in the right socket and turn on the radio. If the radio works, the tube is good. Conversely, if you have a stock of known-good tubes, you can pop a type whatever tube into the right socket in your suspect device and see whether anything changes. If it magically improves, then your old whatever tube was a major problem. (This won't reveal other/multiple problems, of course.) If you want to spend several hundred $$ for a top-end tube tester, it's your money. Keep in mind that old test equipment will always need restoration (recapping, cleaning controls, etc.), like everything else of that vintage. Plus, it may require calibration and expertise beyond simple parts replacement. If you don't already have a lot of equipment and experience, that could put you in a chicken-and-egg situation. Uh-oh, I need to buy another (reliable) tester to test things on the (probably unreliable) tester .. . . . Have fun. Phil Nelson Phil's Old Radios http://antiqueradio.org/index.html |
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