--------------------------------------------------
From: "Col. Paul E. Cater" <paulecater@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2015 2:14 PM
Cc: "Amps reflector" <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] ceramic vs glass
 
Carl,
 you must really enjoy hosing down the decks with testosterone.  It seems 
to
be a pattern.  When things turn a bit off for you, you get personnel.  So
be it, that is your style.
 
 
 ** Nice try at damage control. When the seat gets hot the accusations fly 
and trying to spin it back.
Any credible debater wouldn't stoop to that.
 I have reviewed the specs sheets and my comments hold true to what they 
are
saying about the 500 & 400Zs.  Seal temps are the thing.  Both mention 
that
more cooling will extend tube life.  I see nothing but them insuring you
have the proper sockets & chimneys in place.
  
**  You havent dug deep enough.
 
In closing, I am very proud to be a Kentucky Col.  It has nothing to due
with current nor past military service.  Go to their site and read the
history.
 
 
 ** Oh Ive read all about that and the 1856 mansion you get to live in as 
caretaker some time back
to satisfy my curiosity. It must be fun to host the ghostchasers.
 ** The original part of my house was built before 1835, no ghosts yet but 
lots of spiders, mice,
snakes, squirrels, bats, wasps, and chipmunks when I bought it in 89.
They are a wonderful group of gentlemen that do great works.  If
 you do not like it "* So what about the Kentucky Colonel type of 
honorific*"
simply block or delete my posts Mr Warrant Officer.
  
** What and miss all the fun with El Colonel?
The Naval WOs I worked
 
with were a nice group of folks.  We had several in the crypto community.
 
 
 ** I was also involved in crypto and we may have crossed paths. I was 
primarily an instructor
and working with enlisted and officers was a pleasure since they had respect 
for the Senior
and Master Chiefs and the WO's who had decades of experience.
 Dealing with some civilians who were so full of themselves was a disruption 
to the class.
Maybe we really did cross paths.
 
Myself, I held the equivalent of flag rank after departing the Navy for a
real pay check.
 
 
 Gee Whiz, I never got past Commander as a civilian but I always preferred to 
bunk with the Chiefs when at sea.
A much nicer group of people especially on CVN's.
Carl
KM1H
 
Paul
WD8OSU
On Sat, Jan 24, 2015 at 1:52 PM, Carl <km1h@jeremy.qozzy.com> wrote:
 
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Col. Paul E. Cater" <paulecater@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2015 11:57 AM
Cc: "Amps reflector" <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] ceramic vs glass
 I didn't mention any numbers.  If I did I would have pulled them out my
 
butt like most do.
 
 
** Unfortunately that is true.
I really don't know where you would find any reliable
 
data on it other then peoples experience and hearsay.
 
 
** Myself and several others across the many forums have decades of amp
experirence repairing them for others or replying to posts. I feel I can
trust the others and Ive kept pretty good records since the 60's.
 Duty cycle plays the
 
most important role in all of this.
 
 
** That is the least important as the majority are on SSB and CW is a
 distant second. RTTY is way down on the curve plus amp manuals specify 
the
derating for it and AM. Most digital mode users are proud of doing it 
with
100W or less.
 My sole point was, tubes properly cooled last way longer in full tilt
 
buggy
 then those that are not.  The muffin fan jobs you mention and 
specifically
the SBs are not rated anywhere near the tubes capability.  Niether is 
the
P/S for that matter.
 
 
Even contesting isnt full tilt use of an amp and there are still many
 flogging a SB-220 which was built as a 1000W CW 2000W PEP INPUT amp. 
Maybe
you werent playing ham back in those days.
 
Having used both types at many MARS stations and myself, we opted for
 something that used chimneys as we did not have to replace the tubes. 
More
money initially but not popping bottles in and out.  I was sitting here
 trying to recall if I ever replaced a 500z in a top end amp, ie Henry. 
or
whomever.   I do recall putting them in muffin fan decks often.
 
 
MARS isnt ham radio
 Nope, didn't look up the spec sheet.  Last time I looked at one cooling
 
was
stated verses usage with minimums.  I'll have a look.
So, my opinion and experience speaking and nothing else.
 
 
** That is obvious.
 
Paul
WD8OSU
 
 
** So what about the Kentucky Colonel type of honorific? Id expect a real
USA, USAF, or USMC Colonel or other officer would
be a bit upset to see it always in their face. Im just a retired USN WO4
and don't have to keep pushing it.
Carl
KM1H
 
On Sat, Jan 24, 2015 at 11:19 AM, Carl <km1h@jeremy.qozzy.com> wrote:
 I don't know where you get those numbers from but they are obviously
 
improperly weighted.
 First of all the 3-500  fan amps far outnumber the ones with chimneys 
by
a
huge amount,
 the SB-220/221/HL-2200 alone sold in the 30-50K range according to 
many.
Fan failures are actually very few if the owners had enough smarts to 
oil
the bearings and remove the filth off the blades once in awhile. For an
amp
that first sold in 1970 it has an extremely good track record
considering the abuse it gets by clueless hams.
 Reports of SB-220's with filament pin solder melting can always be 
traced
to builder inability to read and follow directions,
or a later owner being lazy or forgetful.
The positioning of the fan blade on the shaft is critical; plus that
little aluminum top piece is critical to direct air below the
chassis....many left it off after servicing the amp.  A couple of other
 brands were designed by those who didn't understand air flow and 
created
air dams below the chassis; drilling a few 1/4" holes at the end to
equalize release solved that problem.
The Command Technologies amps are another case of an air dam frying
components; this time the PS board and components.
 The AL-80 family is also a huge 3-500 seller going back 30 years and 
fans
arent a problem for most even at the ridiculous power the manual says 
is
OK. Tubes and RF components fail but not due to the fan. When
manufacturers
switch to a cheap plastic fan to save money you can expect noise and
quality problems.
The Ameritrons with blowers and chimneys have their share of blower
failures or just noisy bearings that owners tolerate; the sales totals
are
actually quite low so you hear little about it but there are far more
active amp forums than this very obsolete email reflector.
 Something else you obviously missed is that Eimac approved in writing 
and
later in spec sheets the use of fan cooling as far back as the 60's for
the
Johnson Thunderbolt which used 4-400A's. The stipulation was that seal
temperatures not be exceeded and Im not
aware of any 4-400, 3-400, or 3-500 that had a glass meltdown in normal
use....CB use doesn't count!
Carl
KM1H
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Col. Paul E. Cater" <paulecater@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2015 9:40 AM
Cc: "Amps reflector" <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] ceramic vs glass
  I'm dubious about some of the ceramics. The ones that require more 
parts
 
to
protect it then actually use it and the old Russian jobs.
The 500Z is a time proven design. Many of the failures are do to
 mechanical issues, over optimistic ops, and not the tube itself. I 
have
never understood why someone would build up a pair of 500s and put a
muffin
 fan on them. Cheap commercial jobs do this to save money. It is really 
a
disservice to the tube and it's capabilities. The mean time between
failures on muffin fan types and actual blowers with chimneys on these
guys
is enormous.
Paul
WD8OSU
On Sat, Jan 24, 2015 at 9:08 AM, Jim Thomson <jim.thom@telus.net>
wrote:
 Date: Sat, 24 Jan 2015 12:53:21 +1030
 
From: "Leigh Turner" <invertech@frontierisp.net.au>
To: "'Bill Turner'" <dezrat@outlook.com>, <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [Amps] 5 Minutes for Ameritron 811H to warm up?
 Personally I wholeheartedly concur with your sentiments here Bill; 
most
of
my shack amps are of the ceramic tube variety and indeed do seem to
last
forever.
My only exception amp is the venerable Kenwood TL-922 with its
nostalgic
 pair of Eimac 3-500Z glass bottles...they too have proven very 
reliable
workhorses!  The proviso rider with any tube is absence of abuse.
73
Leigh
VK5KLT
##  whats the most anybody has gotten out of these russian ceramic
wonder
tubes
 like GU-74B etc ??     Can you get 20 years out of them, beating on 
em
7
days a week,
like an Eimac 3-500Z  ?
##  What is longest anybody has gotten out of an Eimac 8877 ??
 ##  at least with the bigger eimac ceramic tubes, like 3x3, 3x6, 
3x10,
4x5, 4x10,
they can be re-built till hell freezes over, unlike their throw away,
smaller ceramic
siblings.   IMO, you get a bigger bang for the $  with the bigger
ceramic
tubes, esp
 since being thoriated tungsten fil, you can reduce the fil V way 
down,
like 12% or more,
 further extending tube life.   Take a 3x3... rated for 2.5 A  CCS 
plate
current...then run it
at 1.5 to 1.7 A plate current..alon with reduced fil V.  It will last
forever.
The typ 2 x 3-500Z amp is rated at 800ma max plate current.... and my
L4B
runs
at 800ma..just to get 1290w po.
Jim  VE7RF
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