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Re: [Amps] Sad News for Eimac Users

To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] Sad News for Eimac Users
From: Manfred Mornhinweg <manfred@ludens.cl>
Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2012 21:33:05 +0000
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>
John,

Then I asked the Eimac distributor, Richardson Electronics, for a price and availability quote.

 Item   Qty Part Number                     Br Unit Price  Extension Delivery
   1      1 3CX1200A7                       EI   1,625.00   1,625.00 18 Weeks
   2      1 3CX1200D7/YU121                 EI   1,200.00   1,200.00 Stock
   3      1 3CX1200Z7/YU181                 EI   1,200.00   1,200.00 Stock
   4      1 3CX1500D7                       EI   1,395.00   1,395.00 18 Weeks

I have no idea what "Br" and "EI" mean in the quote.

It means "Brand" and "EIMAC".

I'm not buying any of these. I was just curious.

Neither would I. Unless I needed one as a replacement for an existing transmitter or other device, that is otherwise still good, and too expensive to replace completely.

But for new design, I think one would need to be blind not to see the writing on the wall. Take the hint!

When in the 1970s receiving tubes started to get more expensive and harder to find, while transistors were already dirt cheap and very good, there were still many designers who were reluctant to learn their trade anew. They kept designing with tubes, until they simply lost touch with the real world. Those in teh industry lost their jobs, while hobbyists continued to design with tubes until they died, as part of they hobby, in which there was no pressure to be competitive. Then in around 1980 the same happened with transmitting at the 100 watt level. And then, in the 90s, it reached the kW level. The lower power tubes are mostly gone from production, except for some used by the esoteric audio gang, which is large enough to sustain some small factories in China. The industry has since mostly dropped tubes in the 1kW class sector, be it transmission, medical, or industrial uses. They are using them for replacement purposes, in some cases, and this is dying out. Many hams are moving to 100% solid state up to legal limit power right now. There still IS room for home builders to build tube amps just for fun, but this group will hardly remain large enough to sustain factories like the audio gang is doing. That means that 1kW class transmitting tubes WILL be discontinued, and most of them rather soon. Probably existing stock will last nostalgics for several decades, so don't cry, but the technically sensible thing to do is to leave this old technology behind and take advantage of the modern developments.

Manfred

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