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#1
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http://www.r-type.org/pdfs/kt88.pdf
I'm wanting to get 35W plate dissipation running unvarying DC current through a KT88 and run it for several hours on a the tube that has not been run for two decades. I'm hoping that this might activate the getter and reduce some glassiness. I'm trying to make the circuit as simple as possible. I have access to 350V dc (not variable as it is) at 120mA max. To get 35W plate dissipation we can have 350V x 100mA. Or lowest voltage, 152V x 230mA (tube can pass 230mA cathode current). But max current I have is 120mA, so that means lowest voltage is 291V x 120mA). Is the simplest circuit to?: Ground the grid - have static plate voltage of 350V, and adjust Vg2 voltage by placing a resistance in Vg2 circuit? I'm looking at page 6 in the above document, top graph, and thinking if I got Vg2 to about 100V, then Ia would be about 125mA. That's too hight, so Vg2 would have to be lower than 100V. This is the simplest circuit arrangement I can think of, because I don't have arrange for grid bias, or an adjustable PSU voltage, or putting a high-wattage resistor in series with cathode. I don't know how to calculate Vg2 series resistance to get about 100V. Am I on the right track - or not. :c). Thanks. |
#2
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On 10/06/10 16:41, Richard so witilly quipped:
http://www.r-type.org/pdfs/kt88.pdf I'm wanting to get 35W plate dissipation running unvarying DC current through a KT88 and run it for several hours on a the tube that has not been run for two decades. I'm hoping that this might activate the getter and reduce some glassiness. I'm trying to make the circuit as simple as possible. I have access to 350V dc (not variable as it is) at 120mA max. To get 35W plate dissipation we can have 350V x 100mA. Or lowest voltage, 152V x 230mA (tube can pass 230mA cathode current). But max current I have is 120mA, so that means lowest voltage is 291V x 120mA). Is the simplest circuit to?: Ground the grid - have static plate voltage of 350V, and adjust Vg2 voltage by placing a resistance in Vg2 circuit? Grounding the grid might be unstable unless you want to control plate current via screen current/voltage. If you don't want to use a grid bias (cathode resistor or -V bias supply) then you might try varying screen current using a series triode and a single cathode resistor. If you look on the performance curve for the triode, you should see an approximate voltage for a desired plate current. Then pick a resistor that will drop that voltage, place it in series with the cathode and wire the triode's grid and screen on the other end of the cathode resistor (yes the triode's cathode potential will be at 100V, more on this later). Then wire the triode's plate to 350V DC. A typical triode will dissipate 5W or so so you might have to put 2 in parallel but they often come in pairs anyway. For more fine adjustment you could put a potentiometer on the triode's grid and drop a bit more voltage than necessary with the cathode resistor on the triode. Then you could adjust the triode's grid voltage to vary the screen current (and plate current) on the KT88. FYI you might need a separate heater supply for the triode. +200V on a cathode might not do well, depending on the tube. (hopefully this isn't too complex, just 2 or maybe 3 additional components) |
#3
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On 10/10/2010 07:01, Big Bad Bob wrote:
On 10/06/10 16:41, Richard so witilly quipped: http://www.r-type.org/pdfs/kt88.pdf I'm wanting to get 35W plate dissipation running unvarying DC current through a KT88 and run it for several hours on a the tube that has not been run for two decades. I'm hoping that this might activate the getter and reduce some glassiness. I'm trying to make the circuit as simple as possible. I have access to 350V dc (not variable as it is) at 120mA max. To get 35W plate dissipation we can have 350V x 100mA. Or lowest voltage, 152V x 230mA (tube can pass 230mA cathode current). But max current I have is 120mA, so that means lowest voltage is 291V x 120mA). Is the simplest circuit to?: Ground the grid - have static plate voltage of 350V, and adjust Vg2 voltage by placing a resistance in Vg2 circuit? Grounding the grid might be unstable unless you want to control plate current via screen current/voltage. If you don't want to use a grid bias (cathode resistor or -V bias supply) then you might try varying screen current using a series triode and a single cathode resistor. If you look on the performance curve for the triode, you should see an approximate voltage for a desired plate current. Then pick a resistor that will drop that voltage, place it in series with the cathode and wire the triode's grid and screen on the other end of the cathode resistor (yes the triode's cathode potential will be at 100V, more on this later). Then wire the triode's plate to 350V DC. A typical triode will dissipate 5W or so so you might have to put 2 in parallel but they often come in pairs anyway. For more fine adjustment you could put a potentiometer on the triode's grid and drop a bit more voltage than necessary with the cathode resistor on the triode. Then you could adjust the triode's grid voltage to vary the screen current (and plate current) on the KT88. FYI you might need a separate heater supply for the triode. +200V on a cathode might not do well, depending on the tube. (hopefully this isn't too complex, just 2 or maybe 3 additional components) Well, let's start from my current situation and see if I'm doing something not quite right. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/richard.../kt88test.html Here you see a picture of my current setup. I'm using a transformer with secondary of 350V 0 350V at 120mA, an 8 henry choke and a 5Z4G rectifier. It's currently wired as choke input, then a 4 uF capacitor after the choke. When there is a suitable load to enable the choke input circuit to operate correctly, the output voltage is about 310V. I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. I had trouble with parasitic oscillation, but putting ferrite beads on anode, screen and cathode wires appears to have killed it. The grid has no bead, but a there is a 1K0 resistor close to the the g1 pin on the valve socket. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. Okay, with this setup (which may be deficient, but I would not know why) anode current goes way up to 240mA, the voltage output from PSU drops to about 250V. Under these conditions bias resistor develops 64.8V. Of course I cannot maintain the level of current but for several seconds. Remember, I'd be trying to employ the graph for triode connection he http://www.r-type.org/pdfs/kt88.pdf I would say, does this heavy current mean the tube is terribly gassy? Of course, I cannot use the circuit to maintain current to the tube that would really get the tube heated over a period. Is my current circuit arrangement not reliable to ascertain the condition of the tube? Should I even try another circuit to bring the current to 125mA and leave it running for several hours to see if gassyness reduces? Given the results achieved so far with the current circuit. |
#4
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errata:
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/richard.../kt88test.html Here you see a picture of my current setup. |
#5
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I said:
Remember, I'd be trying to employ the graph for triode connection he http://www.r-type.org/pdfs/kt88.pdf If the HT is 250V and the current is 240mA, should not the bias be around -7V according the the triode connection graph? But it's around -65V. Is this the "proof" of gassyness? |
#6
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On Oct 13, 7:37*am, Richard wrote:
I had trouble with parasitic oscillation, but putting ferrite beads on anode, screen and cathode wires appears to have killed it. The grid has no bead, but a there is a 1K0 resistor close to the the g1 pin on the valve socket. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/richard.../kt88test.html A nice clean layout, but I suspect the loops of wire all around the place form inductors which have Q and couple to each other at very high frequencies, just enough to oscillate. The ferrite beads kill the Q. Rearranging the wires may have a similar effect. G. |
#7
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On Oct 13, 11:14*am, glenbadd wrote:
On Oct 13, 7:37*am, Richard wrote: I had trouble with parasitic oscillation, but putting ferrite beads on anode, screen and cathode wires appears to have killed it. *The grid has no bead, but a there is a 1K0 resistor close to the the g1 pin on the valve socket. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/richard.../kt88test.html A nice clean layout, but I suspect the loops of wire all around the place form inductors which have Q and couple to each other at very high frequencies, just enough to oscillate. The ferrite beads kill the Q. *Rearranging the wires may have a similar effect. G. I agree that the layout seems neat enough but of course leads are rather long. I use shorter leads. I also never would use screwed connections for a test circuit and only use all soldered connections. Such connections can be made or un-made to 16mm long brass plated 4guauge wood screws screwed into the breadboard, so the screwed connectors don't need to be used at all. But usually with such tests of a tube there is NO TENDENCY for any oscillation even with overlong leads everywhere. I've done all this sort of thing many times and the never noticed much oscillation at RF or any other frequency. However, when a tube becomes faulty and conducts way too much Ia for a given grid bias voltage then it can become unstable and oscillate. When left to run with excessive Ia the anode dissipation is excessive and the anode will turn bright red. One should be able to quickly measure the Ea and Ia and multiply them to calculate the Pda, ie, say 300Vdc from anode to cathode x 100mA of current measured in the cathode resistor gives Pda = 300Vdc x 0.1Adc = 30 watts of heat power being liberated; Pda means Power Dissipated at Anode. 30W would be OK for KT88, but 55W will produce red glowing anodes. After fusing and wrecking a few new or old tubes or PSU parts then the message about all this stuff sinks in unless you cannot learn from experience or ask the right questions about what is in front of you. Probably the tube the OP is testing is gassy, and very second hand. But he should try to test 4 tubes in successsion and if they all show the same behaviour then either there is something wrong with the test circuit or there is something similarly wrong with all 4 tubes which would be unlikely. Many people have kept gassy tubes in the hope that some day a good cure can be found. But none has ever been found and nobody is researching for a fix, so gassy tubes belong only in the rubbish bin; they won't cure and they won't ever get better. He could have easily stopped any oscillations with 0.1uF x 630V rated from grid to cathode and from anode to cathode. But if the tube had been healthy he could have left these caps in place and done signal F measurements at say 60Hz using a portion of the mains F as a test signal via pot of say 20k placed across the heater supply where one side is at 0V and the other is hot at 6.3Vrms. The capacitance won't affect measurements at low F. However, he should have a much bigger C value for his choke input C if he expects to make accurate ac measurements with LF test signals. I can only guess the guy is a beginner and strapped for cash and he doesn't know which bins in which to find old cheap junk he can addapt. But 470uF caps rated for +450V are only about $12 and surely that is MUCH better than the ancient low value C in a can he presently is using. Having 10 ohm resistors in series with anode, cathode, grid and screen allow fast measurement of the Vdc across each and later calculation of Idc which is Vdc / 10. Patrick Turner. |
#8
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On 12/10/2010 21:37, Richard wrote:
I said I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. Okay, with this setup (which may be deficient, but I would not know why) anode current goes way up to 240mA, the voltage output from PSU drops to about 250V. Under these conditions bias resistor develops 64.8V. Okay, I made a change which altered the readings significantly. I have a triode connection, ferrite beads on anode, screen and grid wires, but I had only a 1K0 grid stopper next to g1 pin on the tube socket. A 270R cathode bias resistor. Ia was 240mA Voltage across bias resistor was 64.8V PSU voltage 250V (dropped 60V due to overdrawing PSU design current) I took out the grid stopper, and simply placed ferrite beads on the grid wire. Now the figures a Ia 90mA Voltage across bias resistor is 24.3V PSU Voltage is 310V Removing that 1K0 grid stopper altered the whole thing. Things look much better. Why did removing the 1K0 resistor in g1 circuit change things so significantly? |
#9
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On 13/10/2010 12:37, flipper wrote:
On Wed, 13 Oct 2010 11:45:37 +0100, wrote: On 12/10/2010 21:37, Richard wrote: I said I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. Okay, with this setup (which may be deficient, but I would not know why) anode current goes way up to 240mA, the voltage output from PSU drops to about 250V. Under these conditions bias resistor develops 64.8V. Okay, I made a change which altered the readings significantly. I have a triode connection, ferrite beads on anode, screen and grid wires, but I had only a 1K0 grid stopper next to g1 pin on the tube socket. A 270R cathode bias resistor. Ia was 240mA Voltage across bias resistor was 64.8V PSU voltage 250V (dropped 60V due to overdrawing PSU design current) I took out the grid stopper, and simply placed ferrite beads on the grid wire. Now the figures a Ia 90mA Voltage across bias resistor is 24.3V PSU Voltage is 310V Removing that 1K0 grid stopper altered the whole thing. Things look much better. Why did removing the 1K0 resistor in g1 circuit change things so significantly? It shouldn't have.. unless it wasn't connected to ground or the tube has an incredible amount of grid leakage. You may possibly have been right on the first point or there was an oscillation I never knew about because there were no ferrites on wire to g1. Not sure which was right. I reconnected the 1K0 resistor, but this time I put two beads near g1 pin. So, that's a slightly different setup, because before the 1K0 was wired in without the beads. Anyway I also now wired in a switch to short out that 1K0 resistor or not as required, and either way the plate current is (as you say it should be)precisely the same. So, perhaps the tubes are still good. I think to check for gassiness I need to get a reading of grid current. I have a 200uA meter. Should I place this in series in the g1 circuit and get a reading? Or read voltage across the 1k0? If so what voltage would I be looking for? How should I get an indication of grid current? |
#10
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I said:
I think to check for gassiness I need to get a reading of grid current. I have a 200uA meter. Should I place this in series in the g1 circuit and get a reading? Or read voltage across the 1k0? If so what voltage would I be looking for? How should I get an indication of grid current? Well, I put the 200uA meter in series with the 1K0 resistor, or with the wire that goes to g1. If this correctly reads grid current, then it looks like I've no grid current on one two and about 4uA on the other. What is acceptable grid current for a GEC KT88? |
#11
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glenbadd wrote:
On Oct 13, 7:37 am, Richard wrote: I had trouble with parasitic oscillation, but putting ferrite beads on anode, screen and cathode wires appears to have killed it. The grid has no bead, but a there is a 1K0 resistor close to the the g1 pin on the valve socket. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/richard.../kt88test.html A nice clean layout, but I suspect the loops of wire all around the place form inductors which have Q and couple to each other at very high frequencies, just enough to oscillate. The ferrite beads kill the Q. Rearranging the wires may have a similar effect. alternately electrolytic capacitors are NOTORIOUS for misbehaving at high frequencies. HF oscillation can be killed by placing a 0.1 microfarad capacitor in parallel with the electrolytic filter capacitor, and (as you pointed out) not having wires curving about. Straight point-to-point wiring helps with stray oscillation when there's no negative feedback in place to limit the overall gain. I'm guessing the tube at the top of the photo is a full wave rectifier and there's a filter choke and potted filter capacitor to the right of it (in that order). In that case the KT88 would be the tube at the bottom of the picture, with the ammeter in series with the plate, correct? |
#12
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On Oct 13, 9:45*pm, Richard wrote:
On 12/10/2010 21:37, Richard wrote: I said I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. Okay, with this setup (which may be deficient, but I would not know why) anode current goes way up to 240mA, the voltage output from PSU drops to about 250V. Under these conditions bias resistor develops 64.8V. Okay, I made a change which altered the readings significantly. I have a triode connection, ferrite beads on anode, screen and grid wires, but I had only a 1K0 grid stopper next to g1 pin on the tube socket. A 270R cathode bias resistor. Ia was 240mA Voltage across bias resistor was 64.8V PSU voltage 250V (dropped 60V due to overdrawing PSU design current) I took out the grid stopper, and simply placed ferrite beads on the grid wire. Now the figures a Ia 90mA Voltage across bias resistor is 24.3V PSU Voltage is 310V Removing that 1K0 grid stopper altered the whole thing. Things look much better. Why did removing the 1K0 resistor in g1 circuit change things so significantly? I think you may be a long way from knowing enough to answer your questions by yourself and part of the problem may seem to be that you have no oscilloscope to monitor whether or not there are RF oscillations or what frequency they may be, or whether your ferrite beads have any real effect at all. Bypassing ALL electrodes to a common ground point using say 0.47uF 630V rated plastic caps should eliminate any possibility of RF oscillations. Your obsevations so far lead me to think you have an almost completely ****ed tube. What happens when you test new tubes, or other tubes of the same age? There are many questions you should be asking, IMHO. Patrick Turner.r i.0uF plaPlaicin |
#13
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On Oct 14, 1:14*am, Richard wrote:
On 13/10/2010 12:37, flipper wrote: On Wed, 13 Oct 2010 11:45:37 +0100, *wrote: On 12/10/2010 21:37, Richard wrote: I said I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. |
#14
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On Oct 14, 7:21*am, Big Bad Bob BigBadBob-at-mrp3-
wrote: glenbadd wrote: On Oct 13, 7:37 am, Richard wrote: I had trouble with parasitic oscillation, but putting ferrite beads on anode, screen and cathode wires appears to have killed it. *The grid has no bead, but a there is a 1K0 resistor close to the the g1 pin on the valve socket. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/richard.../kt88test.html A nice clean layout, but I suspect the loops of wire all around the place form inductors which have Q and couple to each other at very high frequencies, just enough to oscillate. The ferrite beads kill the Q. *Rearranging the wires may have a similar effect. alternately electrolytic capacitors are NOTORIOUS for misbehaving at high frequencies. *HF oscillation can be killed by placing a 0.1 microfarad capacitor in parallel with the electrolytic filter capacitor, and (as you pointed out) not having wires curving about. *Straight point-to-point wiring helps with stray oscillation when there's no negative feedback in place to limit the overall gain. I'm guessing the tube at the top of the photo is a full wave rectifier and there's a filter choke and potted filter capacitor to the right of it (in that order). *In that case the KT88 would be the tube at the bottom of the picture, with the ammeter in series with the plate, correct? Indeed SOME but not all electrolytics become poor capacitors at HF and it is possible the test circuit at HF then resembles a HF oscillator and hence becomes unstable. Yes, 0.1uF polyester or polypropylene metal film caps are usually OK but 0.47 even moreso. The caps should be connected to lugs of the tube socket from anode, grid, screen and cathode and all grounded leads taken to a common ground point within 30mm of the tube socket. Cap leads all need to be less than 50mm. This way all the long test leads are bypassed and their inductances and high impedances at RF frequencies, HF, are bypassed and their effects negated. Patrick Turner. |
#15
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Patrick Turner wrote:
Indeed SOME but not all electrolytics become poor capacitors at HF and it is possible the test circuit at HF then resembles a HF oscillator and hence becomes unstable. Yes, 0.1uF polyester or polypropylene metal film caps are usually OK but 0.47 even moreso. right - some electrolytics are better than others. In every well-designed power supply I've ever seen there is a non-electrolytic capacitor in parallel with at least one of the electrolytics for this very purpose (as well as for surge and HF noise suppression for anything that might get through upper stage filtering). There are also input/output impedance mismatches which (from what I recall) _could_ also be the source of oscillations. Or maybe it's just 'bad gas' like you suggested already. A new tube is probably ~$20 on Amazon.com - except for the 'cool experiment with glass and metal and glowy filaments' factor, I'd also consider buying a new one. Just thinking about it, even though we have microchips with zillions of gates less than the size of a dime, there's still a 'coolness factor' associated with glass and metal and glowy filaments. Tubes look like they're actually "doing something". Oh yeah, and there's that blue glow you get from beam power tetrodes. It's sorta like functional art. |
#16
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On Oct 17, 7:46*pm, Big Bad Bob BigBadBob-at-mrp3-
wrote: Patrick Turner wrote: Indeed SOME but not all electrolytics become poor capacitors at HF and it is possible the test circuit at HF then resembles a HF oscillator and hence becomes unstable. Yes, 0.1uF polyester or polypropylene metal film caps are usually OK *but 0.47 even moreso. right - some electrolytics are better than others. *In every well-designed power supply I've ever seen there is a non-electrolytic capacitor in parallel with at least one of the electrolytics for this very purpose (as well as for surge and HF noise suppression for anything that might get through upper stage filtering). Today, many electro caps are far better caps than existed 40 years ago and with much broader bandwidth because they are designed for use in myriad applications where their HF performance is very important, eg, switch mode power supplies and for rail bypassing on boards full of digital devices with lots of switching pulsed signals. So in many apps it is not necessary to bypass modern electros in audio circuits because their impedance increase as F rises happens at well over 1MHz where stray shunt capacitances elsewhere will prevent oscillations at HF, as in the case of a 12AX7 used in a phono amp. But say you try to use a high gn j-fet sch a a 2SK369 to drive a high gm frame grid pentode strapped as a triode in a phono stage for moving coil and in cascode mode, then you WILL GET HF oscillations and maybe at 200MHz unless you are very careful about bypassing and the use of ceramic and plastic caps and RF chokes for heater feeds etc. In other words one must treat some critical audio amps as HF amps but be careful to prevent them becoming oscillators, and lt's face it, an oscillator is an amplifier with positive FB. There are also input/output impedance mismatches which (from what I recall) _could_ also be the source of oscillations. Or maybe it's just 'bad gas' like you suggested already. A new tube is probably ~$20 on Amazon.com - except for the 'cool experiment with glass and metal and glowy filaments' factor, I'd also consider buying a new one. Just thinking about it, even though we have microchips with zillions of gates less than the size of a dime, there's still a 'coolness factor' associated with glass and metal and glowy filaments. *Tubes look like they're actually "doing something". *Oh yeah, and there's that blue glow you get from beam power tetrodes. *It's sorta like functional art. Indeed tubes have lots of aesthetic appeal. But they really do well with music when well set up. Someone in the Hong Kong audio club was once asked in about 1994 to comment about the Halcro class AB mosfet amps and about the sound. "Ah, Hacro, it like 300B, but go louder" ..... inscrutable words from an asian audiophile, and rather deflating for the makers of the Halcro brand which costs about 50 grand for 2 x 200Watt channels where THD at 200W and at 20kHz is 0.0001%, and quite unmeasurable at 1Watt and 1kHz. That blue glow should be a royal dark blue, and rather a subtle effect, and not the bright sky blue of a tube in its death throes. Patrick Turner. |
#17
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On 17/10/2010 04:34, Patrick Turner wrote:
On Oct 13, 9:45 pm, wrote: On 12/10/2010 21:37, Richard wrote: I said I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. Okay, with this setup (which may be deficient, but I would not know why) anode current goes way up to 240mA, the voltage output from PSU drops to about 250V. Under these conditions bias resistor develops 64.8V. Okay, I made a change which altered the readings significantly. I have a triode connection, ferrite beads on anode, screen and grid wires, but I had only a 1K0 grid stopper next to g1 pin on the tube socket. A 270R cathode bias resistor. Ia was 240mA Voltage across bias resistor was 64.8V PSU voltage 250V (dropped 60V due to overdrawing PSU design current) I took out the grid stopper, and simply placed ferrite beads on the grid wire. Now the figures a Ia 90mA Voltage across bias resistor is 24.3V PSU Voltage is 310V Removing that 1K0 grid stopper altered the whole thing. Things look much better. Why did removing the 1K0 resistor in g1 circuit change things so significantly? I think you may be a long way from knowing enough to answer your questions by yourself and part of the problem may seem to be that you have no oscilloscope to monitor whether or not there are RF oscillations or what frequency they may be, or whether your ferrite beads have any real effect at all. Bypassing ALL electrodes to a common ground point using say 0.47uF 630V rated plastic caps should eliminate any possibility of RF oscillations. Your obsevations so far lead me to think you have an almost completely ****ed tube. What happens when you test new tubes, or other tubes of the same age? There are many questions you should be asking, IMHO. Patrick Turner.r i.0uF plaPlaicin There was strong oscillation without the ferrite beads. Even oscillation with the 1KO grid stopper. That made the tube conduct heavy current. When beads were put on every pin, stopped oscillations dead. Now the tube can be tested. There is in fact 4uA ionic current. |
#18
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On Nov 10, 6:48*am, Richard wrote:
On 17/10/2010 04:34, Patrick Turner wrote: On Oct 13, 9:45 pm, *wrote: On 12/10/2010 21:37, Richard wrote: I said I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. |
#19
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On 11/09/10 15:33, Patrick Turner so witilly quipped:
Either leads are kept very short, or you use ferrite beads or you bypass anode to cathode, anode to grid using sufficient C values which will allow signal testing at LF. I have always found ferrite beds to be of limited value, and one does not know exactly what value of inductance results with their use. I've built a number of SS amps using both bjts and mosfets, and the latter can often give oscillation troubles in a circuit even when leads have been kept short. maybe it's acting like a 'Dynatron Oscillator' circuit, through the power supply, due to a non-linear region of the tube's performance curve. Proving that would be more difficult than adding a series resistor or capacitor into the circuit to try to make it NOT happen. It would have to happen in the plate/cathode circuit with the screen grid causing the extra gain. Or something like that. Normally the load would have enough internal resistance to prevent it (as well as impedence reflected from the secondary). There's a formula that has to do with transconductance and matching the load impedence with the input and overall gain. I forget what it is exactly. 'Servo Theory' stuff. If it's mismatched, you get spurious (and sometimes continuous) oscillation. |
#20
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On Nov 11, 8:08*pm, Big Bad Bob BigBadBob-at-mrp3-
wrote: On 11/09/10 15:33, Patrick Turner so witilly quipped: Either leads are kept very short, or you use ferrite beads or you bypass anode to cathode, anode to grid using sufficient C values which will allow signal testing at LF. *I have always found ferrite beds to be of limited value, and one does not know exactly what value of inductance results with their use. I've built a number of SS amps using both bjts and mosfets, and the latter can often give oscillation troubles in a circuit even when leads have been kept short. maybe it's acting like a 'Dynatron Oscillator' circuit, through the power supply, due to a non-linear region of the tube's performance curve. *Proving that would be more difficult than adding a series resistor or capacitor into the circuit to try to make it NOT happen. *It would have to happen in the plate/cathode circuit with the screen grid causing the extra gain. *Or something like that. *Normally the load would have enough internal resistance to prevent it (as well as impedence reflected from the secondary). *There's a formula that has to do with transconductance and matching the load impedence with the input and overall gain. *I forget what it is exactly. *'Servo Theory' stuff.. If it's mismatched, you get spurious (and sometimes continuous) oscillation. I agree entirely. Amplifiers are bandwidth limited devices. But any tube could be made to oscillate, ie, amplify in the presence of positive FB over a wider frequency range than the amp in which they might be used. At radio frequencies the actual full schematic of a tube under test might resemble something very different to what someone knows is present at say 1kHz. Patrick Turner. |
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On 09/11/2010 23:33, Patrick Turner wrote:
On Nov 10, 6:48 am, wrote: On 17/10/2010 04:34, Patrick Turner wrote: On Oct 13, 9:45 pm, wrote: On 12/10/2010 21:37, Richard wrote: I said I'v wired the KT88 triode connection. Anode and screen are at same potential because they are connected. There is a 270R cathode bias resistor, which serves to effectively place a bias on g1, because g1 connects to "earthy" end of the bias resistor. Okay, with this setup (which may be deficient, but I would not know why) anode current goes way up to 240mA, the voltage output from PSU drops to about 250V. Under these conditions bias resistor develops 64.8V. Okay, I made a change which altered the readings significantly. I have a triode connection, ferrite beads on anode, screen and grid wires, but I had only a 1K0 grid stopper next to g1 pin on the tube socket. A 270R cathode bias resistor. Ia was 240mA Voltage across bias resistor was 64.8V PSU voltage 250V (dropped 60V due to overdrawing PSU design current) I took out the grid stopper, and simply placed ferrite beads on the grid wire. Now the figures a Ia 90mA Voltage across bias resistor is 24.3V PSU Voltage is 310V Removing that 1K0 grid stopper altered the whole thing. Things look much better. Why did removing the 1K0 resistor in g1 circuit change things so significantly? I think you may be a long way from knowing enough to answer your questions by yourself and part of the problem may seem to be that you have no oscilloscope to monitor whether or not there are RF oscillations or what frequency they may be, or whether your ferrite beads have any real effect at all. Bypassing ALL electrodes to a common ground point using say 0.47uF 630V rated plastic caps should eliminate any possibility of RF oscillations. Your obsevations so far lead me to think you have an almost completely ****ed tube. What happens when you test new tubes, or other tubes of the same age? There are many questions you should be asking, IMHO. Patrick Turner There was strong oscillation without the ferrite beads. Even oscillation with the 1KO grid stopper. That made the tube conduct heavy current. When beads were put on every pin, stopped oscillations dead. Now the tube can be tested. There is in fact 4uA ionic current OK, then use the ferrite beads. I have not found any need during my many tests of OPT tubes over the last 15 years. I just kept leads short. The only time I've noticed RF oscillations have been in an OPT tubes in an amp circuit that had begun to overheat and glow red. Usually this had been caused by incorrect bias setting or having too low an anode load so that the AC signal Pda exceeded the rating. It can happen in amps with an OPT which has shorted turns. OP Tubes can then oscillate at some RF which saturates the tube and hasens their melt down unless the amp is turned off or a fuse blows. Have you measured the oscillation frequency? Probably it is at some some RF. The beads act to raise the inductance of the lead wires to a higher value. Beads change the effective circuit to one where RF oscillation becomes impossible due to the arrangement of L and C elements. Either leads are kept very short, or you use ferrite beads or you bypass anode to cathode, anode to grid using sufficient C values which will allow signal testing at LF. I have always found ferrite beds to be of limited value, and one does not know exactly what value of inductance results with their use. I've built a number of SS amps using both bjts and mosfets, and the latter can often give oscillation troubles in a circuit even when leads have been kept short. Patrick Turner. Well, this is the layout: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/richard.../kt88test.html But anyway, I've stopped oscillations. I'm now working out an arrangement to activate the getter. You will like it. (Maybe if it works: :c) |
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