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[Amps] diode junction temps and thermal resistance

To: <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: [Amps] diode junction temps and thermal resistance
From: "Jim Thomson" <jim.thom@telus.net>
Date: Wed, 20 Oct 2010 07:52:29 -0700
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>
Date: Wed, 20 Oct 2010 08:08:08 +0100
From: Ian White GM3SEK <gm3sek@ifwtech.co.uk>
Subject: Re: [Amps] diode junction temps and thermal resistance

Bill, W6WRT wrote:
>If not overtemp, it's almost certainly arcing inside the tube. Even 
>good tubes arc occasionally with no harm to the tube, but there can be 
>harm to components in the HV- to HV+ path and that includes the bias 
>zener(s).
>
>IMO, for a legal-limit amp a ten watt zener is marginally adequate. 
>Even if it can dissipate the cathode current x zener voltage, there 
>isn't much left to absorb arcs. I would recommend a 50 watt stud mount 
>type.
>
>There is a certain amount of guessing in the rating because you never 
>know how massive the arc is going to be.

##  a 50 watt zener requires a 50 w heatsink.  The problem I had
with 10 w zeners back in the 70's is..they are the 1st component to short
out come glitch time.   The problem with both a 10 w and a 50 w zener's
is they won't handle a surge worth a damn.   If you use a zener, use a 
50W unit.  


Actually you *can* know something about the arc.

1. The peak current. The main function of a surge limiting resistor in 
the B+ line is to limit the peak current to a known value, so that Ipk = 
Vb/R. The actual arc current will be time-varying but it can never 
exceed that value of Ipk, so you *do* have a known value to design 
against.

### use a 50 ohm glitch R in the B+ lead, instead of the usual
10-25 ohm unit, and now you can really limit the max peak current. 
A 50 ohm glitch can consists  of parallel 100 ohm WW's... or
 2 x 25 ohm WW's in series.   I use a single  50 ohm-50W WW
in my L4B's... zero problems.  2650 vdc / 50 ohms =  53A max fault
current..... then the B+ fuse blows open in < 2 msecs.   



2. The time it will take to shut the HV supply down (by means of a fuse, 
breaker, relay, crowbar or whatever means you have chosen). It isn't 
easy to get beyond an initial guesstimate of "a few milliseconds", but 
further detail *is* knowable if you're prepared to drill deep enough.

##  I use  a  B+  fuse.....just before the glitch R.   I also use a 2nd HV fuse,
between sec of plate xfmr  and input of diode board [ one leg only].   Then
a  magnetic hydraulic breaker in the 240 vac primary.  Now you van cro-bar the
B+ to chassis all day long...and nothing happens....except a blown B+ fuse. 
On the 7 kv supply, the B+ fuse will open off < 2 msecs.

##  I use a FAST 3agc type  cathode fuse, in the CT of the fil xfmr, with a 
pair of 100k-3W MOF's across it.   For a grid fuse, I used another FAST 3agc
type fuse, wired between chassis and neg terminal of grid meter [or grid shunt].
Nothing gets wired across the grid fuse.   if grid fuse blows open, no path for 
dc grid
current, amp can't be driven, and you end up with zero power out of amp.   Input
swr  rises to infinity.  Input wattmeter detects the high swr and shut's down 
the
 XCVR..and latchs it off. [ the xcvr would shut itself down anyway].        



The big unknown (to me, at least) is what fraction of the total arc 
current will flow through the cathode zener or other bias circuit. To 
trace the current flows, see Figure 2 of:

http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek/boards/triode/triode-manual.pdf

If the grid collects 100% of the arc current, then none of it will flow 
through to the cathode. The current will be steered around that part of 
the circuit, flowing through the B-minus clamping diodes instead, and 
the cathode zener (or other bias circuit) will be unaffected.

##  good point.  Instead of a zener, on the hb amps I use a series
string of 6A10 diodes. Then with a 12 / 20 pos rotary switch, every
2nd or 3rd diode is tapped off.....starting at diode #10.   For a 
real fine adjust, a spst toggle is used across diode #1. To improve the
dynamic bias regulation, a big 10,000 to 200,000  uf  lytic is wired across
the entire string of diodes.  Now the bias can be adjusted on the fly. You can
suck 6A all day though it. With it's 400A surge rating, you can't blow it up 
anyway
so it never needs to be repaired, or replaced.  No heat sink required either. If
you are real hardcore, parallel 6A10's work good too. [12A/800A surge]

##  for simpler stuff, like my L4B.. I used  10 x 1N5408's in series..and a 
SPDT-center off  miniature toggle on the rear apron.   That toggle gives me 3 
positions of bias. 

##  If you have to replace zener's in a GG amp, they were not engineered
correctly to begin with...and ditto with safety diodes between B- and chassis,
and across  plate + grid meter's.   

Jim   VE7RF 





At  the other extreme, if the arc punches clear through the grid 
structure then a large fraction of the current will flow through the 
cathode, causing damage to the cathode and possibly/probably the bias 
circuit. For examples of cathode damage, see:

http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek/misc/gs35-arcs.gif

The GS35b is a planar triode with a disk-shaped oxide cathode and a mesh 
("tea strainer") grid. Comparing the left-hand and right-hand images, 
you can match up the marks on the anode with the corresponding marks on 
the grid. If you then zoom into the left-hand image of the grid, you can 
see where the largest arc has punched through to leave a burn mark on 
the cathode underneath.

These kinds of damage would be much harder to see in other types of tube 
construction, but I'm fairly sure that similar effects will exist.


The key to damage limitation is ALWAYS to install that surge limiting 
resistor in the B+ line! Eimac Bulletin 17 explains exactly why:

http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek/misc/bull17.pdf



-- 

73 from Ian GM3SEK
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek


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