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Re: [Amps] re: baking out tubes

To: Steve Thompson <g8gsq@ic24.net>
Subject: Re: [Amps] re: baking out tubes
From: R.Measures <r@somis.org>
Date: Wed, 27 Oct 2004 04:39:12 -0700
List-post: <mailto:amps@contesting.com>

On Oct 27, 2004, at 2:10 AM, Steve Thompson wrote:


On Tuesday 26 October 2004 21:30, R. Measures wrote:
On Oct 26, 2004, at 7:26 AM, Bill Fuqua wrote:
At 03:41 AM 10/26/2004 -0700, R.Measures wrote:
Thus, when a higher-mileage grid becomes warm from the flow of normal
grid current, the barium coating on it begins emitting electrons in
the Wrong stinkin' direction - and the anode-current starts
decreasing. The barium that sticks to a gold-plated grid of an 8877
can apparently be partly dislodged by vertically and firmly tapping
the top of the tube with a 4oz hammer -- which is the same procedure
that is used to dislodge gold meltballs from the cathode and from the
anode insulator.

My thought was that the cathode material is more likely to be very fine films,
maybe even closer to atomic level deposits,

Directly-heated cathodes (thoriated tungsten filaments) have an atomic level (crystal lattice) epitaxially-bonded surface layer of ditungsten carbide (I was wrong about it being called "tungsten dicarbide") which does c. 99.5% of the electron-emitting. This layer will stay bonded to the cathode with anode PS potentials of up to c. 22,000V. . Indirectly-heated (metal oxide) cathodes have a Ni cylinder that is initially painted with barium carbonate and strontium carbonate. When heated, the carbonates lose their carbon atoms and change to BaO and SrO. The result is a cathode which can emit more electrons per watt of cathode heater/filament power, but the trade-off is that the anode potential limit is c. 25% as what it is for thoriated tungsten filaments. For example, an 8877's cathode consumes c. 50w of heater power and it will produce c. 1.2A of average emission before it begins to suffer from BaO/SrO flaking off. However, to get the same level of emission from a thoriated tungsten cathode, roughly 200w of cathode heat is required. On the other hand, an 8877's cathode can withstand c. 5000V before it gets onto thin ice, but thoriated tungsten can withstand 22,000V, however, 22kV is X-radiation territory, which most definitely isn't nice.


formed from low level long term
evaporation rather than significant particles. In what you describe, I reckon
the cathode material will have been evaporated by whatever caused the metal
to melt, and it will have condensed into the metal balls as they formed.

According to the engineers that originally developed the 8877, gold evaporation occurs only from the surface of the gold plating on the grid, and it happens during an "oscillation condition" (probably UHF). - - Ref:
http://www.somis.org/FooteL.GIF
http://www.somis.org/8877-gs2.JPEG
Although both maladies tend to reduce emission, gold evaporation from the surface of the grid is not related to BaO evaporation from the cathode. The way to tell one from the other is that BaO on the grid causes a slow decrease in emission during the first 10 or so seconds of an NØN test, and loss of emission from gold migration to the cathode does not.


a

I am confused, how does the barium emit current in the wrong direction?

The side of the grid closest to the cathode receives most of the barium
oxide (BaO). When heated, BaO emits electrons toward the cathode.

Is this likely to overcome the force of any applied voltage?

Beats me, Steve. The bottom-line is that it's probably not good engineering practice to run an 8877 heater at 6 or so volts -- like the Dentron DTR-2000 does.


cheerz

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



Richard L. Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734. www.somis.org


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