Amps
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [Amps] GS-35B Vertical Mounting & Input Impedance

To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] GS-35B Vertical Mounting & Input Impedance
From: GM3SEK <gm3sek@ifwtech.co.uk>
Reply-to: gm3sek@ifwtech.co.uk
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 08:01:16 +0000
List-post: <mailto:amps@contesting.com>
Steve Thompson wrote:
> 
> Mike wrote:
> 
>>Hello,
>>
>>Is it okay to use the GS-35B in an upside down, vertical 
>>position?
> 
> 
> Yes - assuming it's not full of loose stuff.
> 
That's OK - the GS35 has an internal sieve:
http://www.pa3csg.hoeplakee.nl/tubes/tubes.html

Most transmitting tubes have the heater/cathode in the middle and the 
anode around the outside. The GS35, GS31 and GI7 are not like that: they 
are UHF-style planar triodes with a flat disk-shaped oxide cathode, a 
domed mesh grid like a small tea-strainer, and a slightly dished copper 
anode. Electrons are emitted across the whole circular area of the 
cathode, come up through the grid and hit the anode. This construction 
gives a very short transit time which is important at UHF.

It also allows the tube to be operated in any orientation and even under 
quite high G forces in airborne equipment. (How they ever lift that lump 
of copper off the runway is a totally different question.)

If you're looking at the photographs, note the reinforcing bars to 
prevent the grid from flexing as it gets hot and expands. Also note the 
extremely effective grounding of the grid, which makes for high 
stability - no long, inductive grid leads here!

You can also see several arc marks on the grid and anode, which PA3CSG 
says are due to that particular tube having been operated at 4kV+. Some 
GS35s will operate fine at higher voltages, but this particular one 
didn't like it and arced repeatedly. In more highly magnified versions 
of those pictures, it is possible to confirm that each arc mark on the 
grid is matched by an arc on the anode. The biggest of these arcs have 
gone through the grid and burned the cathode.

Steve was making a serious point: if there is any loose cathode material 
sitting on the grid, it can emit electrons if the grid becomes hot. 
However, a good tube should have no problems with being operated 
upside-down. The main reason why they don't normally design an amplifier 
that way is not the tube, but the problem of blowing hot air out into 
the small gap between the base of the cabinet and the desk.



73 from
Ian GM3SEK

_______________________________________________
Amps mailing list
Amps@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>