[Amps] GS-35B Vertical Mounting & Input Impedance

Mike k4gmh at arrl.net
Thu Jan 12 15:31:56 EST 2006


Hello Tony,

Thanks for the info., especially about the amount of air needed at sea level.

The only reference regarding the amount of air needed was for the 88 
CFM and never saw any air density reference.  Right now I have a 
screaming blower on the amp.  On a previous amp, a blower was mounted 
in the garage.  The separation of the wall between the shack and 
garage reduced the blower's operating noise.  Their was less air than 
if the blower was mounted on the back of the amp in the shack but the 
air flow was sufficient for the 4CX1600B running 1200 Watts RTTY.

Your information just put the screaming banshee blower back in the 
garage and maybe won't have to use the noise reduction headphones.


At 09:41 AM 1/12/2006, Tony King - W4ZT wrote:
>GM3SEK wrote:
><snip>
> > It also allows the tube to be operated in any orientation and even under
> > quite high G forces in airborne equipment. (How they ever lift that lump
> > of copper off the runway is a totally different question.)
>
>There's more to the huge piece of copper than meets the eye.  Although
>the small data sheet says the anode dissipation of the GS-35B is 1500
>Watts, the amount of heat that can be removed from the tube depends on
>the air flow AND the air density. If you apply the same physics to the
>GS-35B that you will to the 8877 and say the YC-156 and look at the
>altitude to air flow charts, you'll realize that the 1500 Watt limit for
>the '35B was at an altitude much higher than sea level. Work the curve
>backwards and you get 1500 Watts off the GS-35B anode with something
>like 22 CFM at sea level... or a LOT more with the "rated" air flow of
>about 88 CFM.
>
> >
> > If you're looking at the photographs, note the reinforcing bars to
> > prevent the grid from flexing as it gets hot and expands. Also note the
> > extremely effective grounding of the grid, which makes for high
> > stability - no long, inductive grid leads here!
>
>and that's why we shouldn't CREATE inductance in the way we mount that tube.
>
><snip>
> > Steve was making a serious point: if there is any loose cathode material
> > sitting on the grid, it can emit electrons if the grid becomes hot.
> > However, a good tube should have no problems with being operated
> > upside-down. The main reason why they don't normally design an amplifier
> > that way is not the tube, but the problem of blowing hot air out into
> > the small gap between the base of the cabinet and the desk.
>
>Amen
> >
> > 73 from
> > Ian GM3SEK
> >
>73, Tony W4ZT
>_______________________________________________
>Amps mailing list
>Amps at contesting.com
>http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps

         73,
         Mike, K4GMH 


More information about the Amps mailing list