To: | amps@contesting.com |
---|---|
Subject: | Re: [Amps] Conditioning Spare Tubes After Storage |
From: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <G3SEK@ifwtech.co.uk> |
Reply-to: | "Ian White, G3SEK" <g3sek@look-in-signature.co.uk> |
Date: | Tue, 14 Oct 2003 15:46:57 +0100 |
List-post: | <mailto:amps@contesting.com> |
SM0EJR 'Joe' wrote:
I have had some experience in this.... That all makes very good sense. I don't believe that these Russian tubes are significantly leaky, in the sense of a faulty seal that lets air in from the outside. More likely they are made from ceramic and metal materials that are less pure than those used in western tubes, and/or they have not been as thoroughly de-gassed during manufacture. Such tubes may pass all the tests at the factory, but over time they very slowly release some of their gas content into the tube envelope. All "vacuum" tubes actually contain lots of gas molecules. Even a "good" tube contains millions to billions of free gas molecules bouncing around inside the envelope (depending on the size of the tube and the quality of the vacuum). During operation, this gas is continually being removed by the getter, which acts like a 'fly-paper' to which the gas molecules will stick by chemical reaction. The getter in a receiving tube is the silvery deposit on the glass, and is typically barium metal. It is very chemically reactive and will mop-up gas molecules even at room temperature, but it's too volatile to be usable at the high temperatures of transmitting tubes. Getters for transmitting tubes are made of materials that are less volatile, but also less chemically active, so they need high temperatures to make the 'gettering' reaction go faster. But if the tube just sits in a box and never gets hot, the getter doesn't work at all well. That is why transmitting tubes can accumulate gas if they are not used, but will often get better again if they are pre-conditioned by a period of pre-heating. (The exception of course is if a seal has actually failed.) The getter is usually located at the hottest part of the tube. In a ceramic/metal tube, this location is on the cathode, which is why heater-only operation is enough make the getter work - as Joe and many others have found. In a glass transmitting tube, the getter is usually on the anode, so it needs HV and anode current (anode dissipation) to make the getter hot enough to work - but not too much HV, or else the tube may arc. At extremely high temperatures, higher than the tube will ever reach in service, the chemical reaction will reverse and the getter is forced to release the gas it has trapped. When the tube is being manufactured, it is deliberately heated to such extreme temperatures while the tube is still being externally pumped. Once the tube is sealed, the getter is then responsible for maintaining the quality of the vacuum for the rest of the tube's life.
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