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Hi all,After a successful completion of building a pair of speakers, I'm thinking about trying my hand at building an amp or preamp. One big consideration for me is that I live in a very high EMI/RFI area. I'm in downtown Denver, with several Cell Phone towers on top of my building, wireless networks from people all around me, several television broadcast station within a few blocks, etc....Sooo, I'm curious whether SS or Tube designs are more resistant to this type of environment, and what can be done for each of them to guard against it.
This may be a folk tale, but I've heard that cold-war era military circuits were built using tubes because solid state devices would be destroyed by the huge EMP of a nuclear detonation. I'm not saying tubes are less prone to RFI, I'll defer to the experts who say they are not. But, if the folk tale is true true then it's a little ironic.
I'd bet my life the F-22 doesn't use tubes.Bob
It's not a folk tale. In 1976, Viktor Belenko defected from the USSR by flying his MIG-25 from Siberia to Japan. He essentially traded a fighter the West had never seen for safe passage to America. Of course, the plane was completely reverse-engineered. Military engineers at first found it laughable that vacuum tubes, rather than solid state circuitry, were used throughout the avionics and electronics. Clearly these folks were well behind the times. However, once questioned regarding the antiquated circuits, Viktor explained that tubes were used as they were virtually impervious to EMP, heat, cold, and extremely easy to change "on the fly".Have fun,Jerry
Radar, like your microwave oven, is always done with at least one vacuum tube (the transmitter).