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Your first sentence above is absolutely ridiculous except +/- 3% for Thoriated Tunsten filament types, and for pulse types that need proper filament voltage to prevent space charge depletion, and possibly horizontal power output types in TVs. See my previous posts. Please specify, post links, where you actually get your bits of information as none of my RCA manuals, whether receiving manual or transmitting manual, RCA Radiotron Designers Handbook (26 engineers, 1400 pages on tubes, 1960), Eimac, Radio Amateur Handbook, Radio Handbook (750 pages) etc state such.By the way, Telefunken was known for getting 100,000 hours on their 12ax7 "family" under typical conditions. Now if someone/company is running the tubes at maximum ratings (some do), life will be shortened.I also had multiple Tektronix 535A scopes and tubes (50 years old, still have one scope left) that check/measure within normal range, using actual circuitry/typical manual conditions to measure specs, not a "tube tester". So I have trouble believing your information.CheersSteve
SteveYour books are bad or you didn't wear your glasses i don't know but the information is very easy to find if you use google.http://frank.pocnet.net/other/RCA/RCA_Special_Red_Tubes.pdfThe fairytails about Telefunken.....Btw i use a modern tubetracer (calibrated, stabilased powersuplies) not an old tubetester.
Let me try again.I know if the idle plate/cathode current of each section of a dual triode 6922 tube is not the same or close to the same it is not possible to bias the driver tube in the ARC Vt50 amp per ARC specs.
I think I understand the reason why when looking at the VT50 circuit design of the driver tube. That's why I asked is Ohms Law was at play. E=IxRVT50 schematic wiring diagram.http://www.audioresearch.com/ContentsFiles/VT50_SchemPL.pdfIf you look at the VT50 schematic wiring diagram for the driver tube you will see +330Vdc feeds each plate voltage drop 37.5K resistor of the dual triode tube.Each plate set point plate idle voltage is +170Vdc ideally, best world. A trim pot, RV3, circuit is used to vary (raise or lower) the negative cathode bias voltage of each section of the triode tube through a 681 ohm cathode resistor connected to each cathode of the tube which raises or lowers the +DC plate voltage measured at each plate. As you can see from the design of the circuit individual control of the +DC plate voltage is not possible. RV3 raises them both up or both down.
And there is the rub. Unless each section of the tube's plate/cathode current, load, is balanced, (closely matched), you can adjust RV3 that will set the plate voltage of one section of the tube at +170Vdc but the other plate of the other section of the tube could measure, +190Vdc or +150Vdc, for an extreme example.
The closer the match, balance of the plate/cathode current the smaller the spread of the two plate voltages will be. (Note: even in the extreme case above if the section plate voltage was adjusted by RV3 to +170Vdc and then the other ended up +150Vdc it could a problem and take out a 6550 tube or blow a screen resistor because of the design of the VT50. Not to mention the performance of the channel and sound of the channel.)
So, where does close matching of GM come into play? If each section of the tube GM are several hundred MICROMHOS apart will this cause/affect the plate bias voltage adjustment of the driver tube in the VT50 as described above?
Or was it the used tubes I tested that that were closely matched just better selected for balanced/matched for plate/cathode current for each section and was not the close MICROMHOS readings I tested on the Hickok 6000A tube tester at all that yielded the close differences of the plate voltages of each section of the driver tube? If that is the case then the vendor that sold me the last quad of closely matched low noise tubes did not select/find a closely balanced/matched tube/s with tube sections of each tube with equal plate/cathode current measurements. Your thoughts?
From the RCA Radiotron Designers Handbook, 26 engineers, 1960:QuoteUnder normal conditions a valve should be operated with its filament or heater at the recommended voltage; in the case of an oxide coated valve it is possible to have fluctuations of the order of 10% up or down without seriously affecting the life or characteristics of the valve........If the filament or cathode is operated continuously with a higher voltage than that recommended, some of the coating material is evaporated and permanently lost, thus reducing the life of the valve. Moreover, some of this vapour tends to deposit on the grid and give rise to what is known as grid emission when the grid itself emits electrons and draws current commonly known as negative grid current.......If the filament or heater is operated for long periods at reduced voltages, the effect is a reduction in emission, but no damage is generally done to the valve unless the cathode currents are sufficient to exhaust the "space charge." Low cathode temperature is, therefore, permissible provided that the anode current is reduced in the proper proportion.As noted above, under normal conditions, +/- 10% will not deplete the space charge (typical plate current is generally listed in the specifications sheet), and with less than typical plate current, 5% is just fine. 17% or more is another matter that must be weighed carefully. At less filament voltage, the carbonates evaporate less, so grid contamination is less over time, a plus.Directly heated tubes with common cathode/filaments are a different story. Thoriated tungsten filaments with plus 3% increase voltage will increase emission by some 20%, while reducing cathode life by some 50%. Conversely, lowering the filament voltage by 3% will decrease emission by some 20%, but extend cathode life by some 50%. (Eimac Care and Feeding of Power Grid Tubes)
Under normal conditions a valve should be operated with its filament or heater at the recommended voltage; in the case of an oxide coated valve it is possible to have fluctuations of the order of 10% up or down without seriously affecting the life or characteristics of the valve........If the filament or cathode is operated continuously with a higher voltage than that recommended, some of the coating material is evaporated and permanently lost, thus reducing the life of the valve. Moreover, some of this vapour tends to deposit on the grid and give rise to what is known as grid emission when the grid itself emits electrons and draws current commonly known as negative grid current.......If the filament or heater is operated for long periods at reduced voltages, the effect is a reduction in emission, but no damage is generally done to the valve unless the cathode currents are sufficient to exhaust the "space charge." Low cathode temperature is, therefore, permissible provided that the anode current is reduced in the proper proportion.
They are for industrial applications where 10,000 life, rigid construction, uniformity, and stability are paramount.
RCA-XXXX is a XXXX-mu twin triode designed and manufactured for critical industrial applications. In such service, it is particularly useful as a voltage amplifier.
This type has its heaters for the two triode units connected in series so that failure of either heater in bridge circuits makes both units inoperative.
There is no problem supplying 6.0 volts on a 6.3 volt filament in virtually all cases. However, there are extenuating circumstances involving heavy plate current and increased frequencies into the high MHz, and depending upon the tube, in which transit time becomes a problem. 1) Consider that the plate current draw means electrons leaving the cathode, which cools the cathode. (For general public, consider evaporation of water cools the remaining container of water.) The lower the plate current, the less the cathode is cooled by electrons leaving. I run my tubes in the 11A less than typical plate current.
E55,You are out of line, and this discussion has gotten off course. AC
Pardon me?Someone say it is ridiculous what i say and that no books/ datasheet whould ... Etc. Etc...Don't blame me, I am just the messenger.Btw, is there any evidence from any tube that last 100000 hours! No! Just 80000 for a thoriated tungsten tube and oxidecoated tubes have shorter life........
Steve what cathode tension you would suggest on the 6SN7,6SL7 and 6C33(12V parallel)?
As I mentioned in my previous posts, it depends upon the design implementation, which includes the plate voltage, plate current, plate dissipation, cooling etc.I stopped used the first two tubes in decades. I have never tested or used the Russian 6C33. CheersSteve
The schematic is this, seems Bias is 180mA:The power trafo(1 per channel) details are these:Ogonowski TS400W EI120/73 core annealed, laminations 0,3mm thick.7 Kg each, Input 220V.Secondary are:0 - 160V x 1Amp /0 - 80v x 200ma /6,3 V x 3Amp /0 - 300V x 200ma /12,6V x 7Amp
Give the 6c33 some time to heat up before you switch the hv on. Its a slow starter.
Unbelievable!! and you are happy with one sole year of life.This could be as little as 500 to 1000 hours of use.CD players are know to put very little stress on tubes.This CDP have soft start circuit?
Yes I know transcondutance is very hi, but I cant read schematics.More I dont know what a hi S could do in the power position. Do you think this schematic did not take it into account?Fell free to point any prob in this project.Thanks