To: | "Jim Reid" <reidj021@hawaii.rr.com> |
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Subject: | Re: [Amps] Ameritron AL-811H-- Again |
From: | R.Measures <r@somis.org> |
Date: | Sat, 1 Oct 2005 03:23:05 -0700 |
List-post: | <mailto:amps@contesting.com> |
On Sep 30, 2005, at 2:33 PM, Jim Reid wrote: Here is the reply I rcv'd this morning from Tom Raush, W8JI, who designed the AL-811H for Ameritron. Note -- the attribution marks in the original were incorrect. The kaput AL-811 I examined had no loss of vacuum in the three tubes that failed. The cause of tube failure was shattered filaments. This malady occurred all at once when the amplifier was putting out RF into a dummy-load. A pop was heard and the filaments went out. My guess is that it was unlikely all three tubes had gas arcs at the same instant. Although most likely under periods of high peak anode voltage (operation), flashovers can occur under ANY condition when HV is present. Even in tubes with good vacuums? Sometimes the arc itself breaks down the gas and getters the tube, chortle. sometimes a tube is not recoverable. shattered filaments are undoubtedly that.
Feedthrough C is what gets through the grounded-grid. A grounded-grid is not a "SHIELD", it's a semi-shield below it's self-resonance point, and at its self-resonance frequency, its not even that. -- Murphy was right about things not being as simple as they first appear.
It is possible to neutralize what gets from the output circuitry to the input circuitry at the operating frequency, however, it is not possible to accomplish this at the frequency of the HF anode circuitry's unavoidable VHF resonance. (In the AL-811 I inspected, the anode circuitry's resonance was c. 95MHz) and to equalize the drive to tubes over a normal range of replacement tubes. I wouldn't let a backyard mechanic without a network analyzer suggest new values based on emotional opinion. Explaining why not would have been helpful. The original suppressors are perfectly [adequate].. The original suppressors have a Q of c. 4.5 at 100MHz. Ni-Cr-Fe suppressors have a Q of <2 at 100MHz. More Q in a parasite suppressor means more Rp* on the anode and more Rp means more VHF amplification. /* Rp = parallel equiv. R /
I have seen evidence that such flashovers commonly occur outside the tube -- typically across the Tune-C and/or from the anode cap to the output-compartment cover.
The ESR of currently produced electrolytics is less than this. If you double that resistance by adding a 10 ohm series resistor, you reduce the surge current to half the value. It will still damage things. 75 amps of HV current isn't much better than the 150 amperes. Even for a 100a-pk rated diode? If you really want to do glitch current suppression you should add at least 25 ohms using a HV surge rated resistor. Depends on the tube-type. Small oxide-cathode tubes need more Ωs. 3-500Zs can use less.
The tubes in the aforementioned AL-811 were making normal P until the instant that a pop was heard and output dropped like a rock. The idea that an arc in a tube can getter a tube would be a good candidate for an April fool article in *QST*. If one or more is bad you'll have a problem even with dozens of circuit mods. If you have problems with an 811 or 572 amp it will almost always just be a tube or tubes. It's always the other guy's fault --- a.k.a.: Not Invented Here Syndrome. That's because tubes are cheaply manufactured and inadequately tested and conditioned before being sold. 3-500Z's are getting that way also. 10-yrs ago, Chinese tubes had mfg problems. The two 3-500ZGs we tested yesterday did not.
In the early 1990s, Eimac was building glass tubes in SLC that had inadequate anode welds which caused the anode to eventually drop down on the grid. and why the people who bought the glass tube line weren't sucessful. They used the same inadequate amount of spotwelding-I that Eimac-SLC used. For some reason, the dudes and dudettes at Eimac-San Bruno knew how much current was needed to produce strong spotwelds. - - - - In college, in sheet-metal shop, we Freshman EE majors learned that a nice, clean spotweld was inherently weak and that a rough-looking spotweld was strong since the rough look was an indication that melting had occurred throughout the weld. We have to live with what is being manufactured and sold. Undiluted hogwash. In the mid 1990's they were testing production 572B's at 200 watts output with 1700 volts on the anode!! This is fodder for people with an agenda because it means there will be significant numbers of field failures related to flashovers.
Richard L. Measures, AG6K, 805.386.3734. www.somis.org _______________________________________________ Amps mailing list Amps@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps |
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