John,
Amen!
Actually you could get the curves on up to the design-maximum, but you had to
request them from the manufacturer. I used to have everything on the two tubes
I used (8950, and M-2057) years ago, but then again I was buying like 250 to
500 tubes at a time from CECO. They would in turn either get the info from GE
for me, or tell me who to contact down in Owensboro, Ky. The design-maximum was
really saying each batch of tubes would give a good service life if the tubes
were ran under it. When you read the quote about the design-maximum I posted
earlier, one can understand why they have it.
73, Will
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 7/8/06 at 9:52 PM john wrote:
>>For example, my RCA data sheets for the 6LQ6 only have
>>constant current charts that go to 450 volts dc. Why is it
>>now OK to specify 900 volts when it is off the charts, when
>
>Maximums are not given on curves, but in the tables. Curves
>show "typical" applications, and are not guaranteed.
>
>A/the major reason not to exceed datasheet limits is that even
>if an application which exceeds datasheet limits works today, theres
>no guarantee that it will with the next batch of devices. Of course
>if your application stops working and you're outside spec application
>limits, the followup discussion with the apps guy is going to be quite
>short.
>
>
>John K5MO
>
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