[AMPS] amazing doubletalk...

Tom Rauch W8JI@contesting.com
Thu, 13 Sep 2001 12:33:33 -0400


> resistance alone may work. But the cause of an unexplained discharge
> within the envelope of a vacuum tube is NOT always because of an
> undesirable oscillation. 

Actually, you can go further than that. Arcs inside tubes are almost 
always NOT caused by parasitics.

In order to have an arc, we all know the peak voltage between two 
points has to exceed the breakdown voltage. The highest peak 
voltages normally occur at the frequency where the amplifier is 
designed to operate.

While an oscillation can occur on frequencies other than the 
operating frequency, the most likely frequency to trigger an arc is a 
frequency at or near where the circuit is optimized for maximum Q 
and gain or below that frequency where anode load impedance is 
high.

The tube should be the last component to break down. A good tube 
typically has many times the rated dc voltage for breakdown 
voltage. It is virtually impossible for any self-oscillation to cause a 
tube with normal voltage breakdown to flash over, just as it would 
be to trigger the arc with actual drive power.

What typically does cause a "glitch" is outgassing in the tube as 
elements heat, seal leakage allowing air in, or metallic "whiskers" 
or debris inside the tube. In most cases, the arc itself will remove 
the problem. If it is a slight outgassing, energy in the arc will break 
down the gas and getter the tube. If it is a metallic whisker or 
debris in the tube, the arc will normally vaporize the stray material.

Tube arcs most often occur either at application of high voltage, or 
during a period of maximum anode voltage (when drive is applied 
with light loading).

Certainly a parasitic can trigger an arc in an unhealthy tube, but far 
more often it is application of HV from a cold start or application of 
drive at the desired operating frequency that triggers the arc. But in 
all cases, a tube with normal voltage breakdown will NOT arc...even 
if it would by some rare chance be oscillating.

Of course glitches can occur outside the tube also from dust, 
moisture or other circuit problems.    
73, Tom W8JI
W8JI@contesting.com 

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