To: | amps@contesting.com |
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Subject: | Re: [Amps] 4CX1600B |
From: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <G3SEK@ifwtech.co.uk> |
Reply-to: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <g3sek@ifwtech.co.uk> |
Date: | Thu, 13 Nov 2003 13:37:54 +0000 |
List-post: | <mailto:amps@contesting.com> |
R. Measures wrote:
Why only 3A? With no grid bias, the tube will draw all the current that its cathode and the HV supply can possibly deliver... and more if it could.** I don't buy it because with 0V on the grid, the HV drops to a low potential because the 1600B is drawing c. 3A, until the mains breaker opens uneventfully.The bang would have come from the external circuit, where that same large current was also flowing (for example from a fuse blowing). Been, there, seen it and heard it. This was only on a little VHF amp using a 5894 but the white-hot anodes lit the whole room, until something in the HV supply failed with a very loud bang! The cause was very simple: the grid bias zener had failed short. The solution was equally simple: replace it with a larger one that didn't run so hot. The surprising good news was that the tube seemed completely unharmed. RF-wise, the amplifier worked fine before the zener failed, and fine again afterwards. KL7RA's amp did the same after his component problem was fixed. He told us that his problem was due to the bias rectifier going short, so the original cause was probably something perfectly simple like a mains spike. That's why I say there's not a scrap of hard evidence or logical reason to suspect *any* RF-related cause in this particular case.
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