Learning About Vacuum Tubes?
Probably a really weird question. :P
I have an interest in old/obsolete technology, and recently vacuum tubes struck my fancy (namely their use in computers). Though, people of my generation have scarcely heard of a VT, so I don't know much about them aside from what I've seen in documentaries about the early days of radio & computers.
I've ordered a few books from the 1930s and later that talk about them and ordered a few VTs off of ebay (to add to my collection of old computer tech), but I'd like to know if anyone here had any recommendations for learning more about them. I'm not really interested in using them and building circuits with them, but I still would like to know a bit more to satisfy my curiosity.
Are there any books or other resources that anyone here could recommend?
I have an interest in old/obsolete technology, and recently vacuum tubes struck my fancy (namely their use in computers). Though, people of my generation have scarcely heard of a VT, so I don't know much about them aside from what I've seen in documentaries about the early days of radio & computers.
I've ordered a few books from the 1930s and later that talk about them and ordered a few VTs off of ebay (to add to my collection of old computer tech), but I'd like to know if anyone here had any recommendations for learning more about them. I'm not really interested in using them and building circuits with them, but I still would like to know a bit more to satisfy my curiosity.
Are there any books or other resources that anyone here could recommend?
Comments
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x3wrzo_fabrication-dune-lampe-triode_tech
-Phil
There is an interesting article in nuts and volts (listed in the above link)
It goes on to explain in some other articles in the same issue that vacuum tubes are still in use. They apparently are capable of very high amperage.
The main thing with tubes is that they amplify NEGATIVE voltages. I've thought of trying to drive a magic eye (I own two in my tube collection) from the Prop, but I'd have to use a charge pump to generate up to -6VDC to do it.
..."The principle of operation is identical to that of a vacuum tube triode"...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_fluorescent_display
And you can buy one here...
http://www.parallax.com/Store/Accessories/Displays/tabid/159/CategoryID/34/List/0/Level/a/ProductID/57/Default.aspx?SortField=ProductName%2cProductName
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That online book collection, localroger, looks fantastic! I actually bought a couple of those books, too. :P Thanks!
http://www.alibris.com/search/books/qwork/2001715/used/Elements%20of%20radio·has $5 copies.
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·"If you build it, they will come."
I wonder if the basic properties of vacuum tubes were discovered by someone working on early light bulbs?
You can picture some old guy building the base of an experimental bulb and he messes up the two wires
holding the filament so he just sticks in some more and ends up with a bulb having both a hot filament
and some extra wires. So he just experiments by hooking things up to one of the wires feeding the filament
and one of the extra wires and discovers some odd effects
The thermionic diode was invented by Edison, he added an electrode to a light bulb.
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Leon Heller
Amateur radio callsign: G1HSM
Post Edited (Leon) : 4/6/2010 7:18:50 PM GMT
Thermionic emission: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermionic_emission
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·"If you build it, they will come."
Portable testers ·at http://www.vacuumtubes.com/hickok_752a.html·& ·http://tone-lizard.com/Tube_Testers.html
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·"If you build it, they will come."
But tubes only have a typical life of 5,000 hours (more was possible particularly for large expensive transmitter tubes, but this was a common design goal for small signal types); the filaments lose emissivity over time, and of course they can burn out. They're also mechanically fragile; the glass envelopes can break and the internal components can become dislodged or bent by shock forces. Depending on how the tube was sealed it could lose vacuum, either a little (becoming "gassy" which would alter their characteristics in all sorts of interesting, mostly bad ways) or outright failing. You could spot a glass tube that lost its vacuum because all tubes had a little spot of sprayed silver metal called the "getter," which was some very highly reactive metal meant to mop up stray gas molecules left in the envelope after sealing, and in a gassy tube the getter would turn white.
Large tubes were so valuable there were actually shops capable of taking them apart, mechanically repairing them, and pumping down a new vacuum to put them back in service. This was a standard maintenance procedure for the large water-cooled tubes used to generate hundreds of thousands of watts, such as the finals of broadcast radio station transmitters.
Did anyone ever make tubes with more than 1 filament?
In case it burned out another could be switched in.
Valves could be made very reliable by using less current through the heaters and low electrode voltages. The ones used in undersea telephone cable repeaters had a typical life of 100 million hours.
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Leon Heller
Amateur radio callsign: G1HSM
Something I wanted to mention before but forgot -- with direct filament tubes (where the filament is the cathode, not just a heater heating a tubular cathode) it was possible for vibrations of the filament wires to show up in the amplified output. This was especially noticeable in DC instrument amplifiers because you could pound the desk the amp was sitting on and make the output jump.
Most people don't believe it, but even with the demise of the television CRT they probably still own a vacuum tube -- in their microwave oven. And kids, if you ever chance to throw out a microwave oven, DO NOT OMIT TO SALVAGE THE MAGNETS. Because microwave magnetron magnets are totally, awesomely cool.
This is a great thread. As a high schooler in the 80's, I ended up working with tubes a lot. I had a tube HAM rig (.5Kw, and yes, it would glow red on a mismatch) with xtal reference, tube Tek dual trace scope, used to repair several old TVs and Radios, including building a new power supply for an older Zenith tower, where the speaker utilized an active coil.
There are many amplifier enthusiasts out there building guitar amps, to exploit the very properties localroger was talking about. Semi's just can't do a good riff the same way an over-driven tube can.
The local market had a big, stand up tube tester, and I was given one very similar to the one shown, by the TV Repair tech, who learned of me, when I took a summer vacation and tuned enough neighborhood TV's to impact his business. [noparse]:)[/noparse] I would generate all the reference signals with a home computer, then work through the various stages of the TV, sorting out linearity, convergence, and overall color purity issues, finishing up with a reference adjustment to get "factory" color. He found out about this and put me to work on the bench for a coupla years... The real secret was the TV technology at the time wasn't capable of enough real fidelity to differentiate between a spot on pro adjustment, and one done by eye, a lens and a home computer, and would degrade over the course of a couple years, requiring frequent maintenance adjustment, which was the mainstay of the TV tech early on.
If I it were me with that spark of interest today, I would deffo get some Nixies, a "magic eye" or two, and various vacuum phosphor displays. They look great, and actually do "warm up" too. If it were not for me seeing the insides of a TV actually do something, like glow, make heat, buzz, etc... I might not have sparked the interest in electronics that I did.
Cool magnet source noted !
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I re-built taxi vacuum tube based transceivers, converting them to the amateur 2m & 6m bands. Used to blow my 30A protection fuse on my Volkswagen 6V battery regularly. I always carried a spare fully charged battery and required it often.
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