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Re: [Amps] More on "baby ur radio"

To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] More on "baby ur radio"
From: Pat <wa4tuk-rf@comcast.net>
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 2015 18:52:40 -0500
List-post: <amps@contesting.com">mailto:amps@contesting.com>
We are mostly in agreement.

I don't have any footnotes or sources to cite; however, my perception is that receiving tubes run within ratings may easily exceed 10,000 hours or more useful service with some going much much longer. FWIW, I recently retired a CRT television that by calculation well exceeded 50,000 hours CRT time. The CRT is not what failed.

I agree that multiple "turn on" thermally stress the tubes especially transmitting types where the turn on surge in some larger tubes must be managed to avoid immediate damage. Very large tubes benefit from filament voltage management where the minimum cathode temperature to provide adequate performance is determined after several hundred hours break in.

If I don't intend to use an older tube radio for at least several hours I don't turn it on. I use the solid state rig instead. For me this is the balancing point.

Transistors do degrade over time as the crystalline structure breaks down and various materials migrate. But you will probably never notice that unless it is a power type that is run hot speeding up aging. At cool temperatures something else will fail before the transistor.

May we all have the time and health to use up and wear out our radios.

Pat
wa4tuk


On 12/17/2015 7:59 PM, Charles H wrote:
On this reflector, I have poo-pooed the idea of baby-ing your radio especially 
by turning it off often, lowering xmit power, etc.
However, I read that with ordinary tubes, the chemistry of the cathodes and filaments are affected 
by life-of-use, so that tubes do "wear out" with use.  Tubes can be rated in terms of 
"hours of use" with the type in a KWM-2 rated at around 2,000 hours of useful function.  
Thorium in the chemical make-up of the metal parts in a tube, maybe a metal or ceramic tube 
(usually added to higher power tubes) can extend tube life to about 100,000 hours.

The conclusion is that "hours of use" of course do matter for hams intending to use their 
tube-type radios for thousands of hours.  The hours of use can be limited by simply turning the 
tube off when having only stand-by function.  However, there is some suggestion in the literature 
indicating that every "turn on" of a tube (or an incandescent light bulb) involves rapid 
heating of the elements inside which could, immediately or over time, deform elements and causing 
sudden failure (given that the metal elements do heat unevenly--due to resistance in the metal--if 
only for a very short duration of time).  Repetition of on-and-off cycles are thus a factor in 
lower tube life.

Other than these factors, it appears in the literature that operating a tube, 
particularly high power transmitting tubes, at its rated values can extend life 
IF it is otherwise not sometimes operated below or above its ratings.  It 
appears that, for example, driving an RF amplifying tube at its full rated 
power does not materially decrease its life.   Reducing drive appears not to 
extend such tubes' life.

It is all a balancing act.  73, Charly

P.S., next question is "do transistors 'wear out'?"
                                        
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