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[AMPS] 8877 rectifier board considerations

To: <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: [AMPS] 8877 rectifier board considerations
From: 2@vc.net (2)
Date: Tue, 20 Nov 2001 07:07:40 -0800
>
>I said:
>
>>>Speaking of glitches..
>>>None of my 8877's have been hot for some time now. (6 months to
>>>2-3 years, depending on the tube) I seem to remember reading here
>>>that someone recommended 4-5 hours on the filaments before
>>>applying B+ .  Does that sound right?
>
>And Rich answered:
>
>>There is no such statement on the tech spec sheets.  If a seal is 
>>leaky, the tube is history.  
>
>Ah.  Then the tales of heating the tubes for a period after 
>extended storage are just that.  

//   On the surface it sounds like a helpful tip.  With some 
multi-hundreds of kWs, 22kV electron-tubes that have been in storage, it 
may be a good idea to run the ion-pump for a while before blastoff.  For 
tetrodes with handles, as well as 3-500Zs and the like which do not 
generate X-rays and don't have an internal ion-pump, I found that there 
is no such thing as disappearing gas, except possibly when the operator 
uses Beano® anti-flatulent tablets.  ------- Also:   If heat is helpful, 
normal operation should be better than running the filament.  
-  The first time I butted heads with the disappearing gas theory was 
during the Grate Parasitics Debate.  This theory was used to explain 
"big-bangs".  However, when I said that I had high-potted a number of 
grid-filament shorted tubes from kaput HF amplifiers that had experienced 
a big-bang, and found over 95% of them to have good vacuums, the 
gettering /disappearing gas theory was used to "explain" my finding good 
vacuums.  Apparently, the gas that had really and truly caused the 
big-bang had simply disappeared because self-gettering had gobbled it up 
- apparently before the operator could switch off the filaments.   Also:  
¿Could an arc in a near-vacuum be heard as a big bang outside the 
envelope?
-  Weird Science.    

>I have no reason to believe
>any seal is leaky, but I had heard that the potential for a 
>startup glitch could be reduced that way.
>
//  The World of Ham Radio is not immune to techno-blather and old wives' 
tales propagated by recognized experts.   
 
cheers, Jim

-  R. L. Measures, 805.386.3734,AG6K, www.vcnet.com/measures.  
end


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