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<.....Adds this to the list of "how to tell if you're an audiophile".... >
For grins I decided to take the temps of these EL34s after about 20 minutes of operation....
No worries, I could help but to give you a poke in the ribs.....from one "phile" to another.
Hi TX,The max temperature should be measured at the side of the tube, where it is the hottest. Probably where the plate is closest to the glass. Maximum temp for most, not all though, is usually around 200-250 degrees C, or 390-480 degrees F, but check the individual tube specs. Some mention the seal temperature, but that is usually transmitting tubes.Cheers and good luck.Steve
Thanks Steve, I did notice the temps were the hottest at the sides, adjacent to the plates (ranging up to about 300-320f...but I sort've figured that the 'hotspots' were not as usable as the average temps....measured near the top, approximately adjacent to the top mica insulator, and below the silvered coating.At any rate, measuring each tube in the same spot seems to yield the 'balance' I think I was looking for. I did notice that very small changes to the bias pots make a very noticeable difference in the tube temp after a few minutes. Hmmmm....Again thanks.
Look about right?Too cool? Too hot?
No probe, you need a ray thermometer.http://www.amazon.com/Fluke-62-Infrared-Thermometer-Battery/dp/B0089N2ZH6
That looks like a nice tool...thanks for the link.
Can you source the temperature rating(s) from an RCA tube manual or something similar
Because the gun measures the spectrum you should know what kind of emmision spectra your object (in this case the tubes plate) is radiating. Most ir-guns are calibrated on carbon black objects and more expensive guns you can choose the radiation patern of the object.