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Michael Black wrote:
What I find intriguing is the realisation that valves ("tubes" to you?) can be operated with only 12V on the anode. That's not new. There were some articles in the various hobby electronic magazines in the fifties and sixties about running them at low voltage, "starved circuits". Of course, that was about the time when new tubes came along that could be run off low plate voltage, a sort of last gasp before transistors took over. You'd see such tubes in car radios in a very specific time span, tubes for the RF stages, maybe in the IF but those might have been transistors, and then the audio stage. That period when tubes weren't yet really good at radio frequencies. Or the COllins R392, that used 28v plate voltage. The best "starved circuit" was an article by John W. Campbell (of science fiction fame) in CQ in the late fifties. It was about running a CRT at relatively low voltage in an oscilliscope. It drove up sensitivity so you could do away with amplification for many purposes (and thus the scope was broadband) but you lost deflection and I think brightness. The scheme came out of Bell Labs, he mentioned some specially built CRTs for the purpose that included magnifiers. Indeed Michael. Anyone active on the home brew scene must have seen projects using valves with low HT supplies, they were quite common and popular in the UK. I expect someone with access to back issues of Radio Constructor could turn up a couple per volume. RC was a popular, if slightly old style, magazine which seemed to include more valve projects than the other magazines of the day. Sadly, it is no more. I think some valves were developed for use in 'Walkie Talkies' which were baseless (ie were wire into circuit via flying leads not plugged into sockets) and were designed to operate with a low HT. There were also valves for hearing aids which were, I suspect, similar. |
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