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#1
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,rec.audio.tubes
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On Aug 12, 11:13*pm, Robert Seely wrote:
Hello, My apologies for the intrusion. but I have a question that I am hoping someone has an answer to. *I have never posted to a news group, so again, my apologies if this does not meet the standard protocol. I have a bunch of Raytheon Subminiature tubes that I inherited from my Father, who was an electronics bugg (I followed a different path) that have code QF-721. *In searching the internet I have found a bunch of identical looking tubes such as one labeled CK6088. I have done lots of searches on the internet and I cannot find out anything about these and am wondering if you know about these, or if you can point me to a website that might shed some light on these. I am considering the possibility of donating these to someone but if I cannot find out what they are for, I cannot imagine how I can find who to donate them to -- perhaps a school or something. Schools arent normally interested in tubes. Generally only museums or collectors would be. NT |
#2
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,rec.audio.tubes
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On Aug 13, 4:12*pm, NT wrote:
On Aug 12, 11:13*pm, Robert Seely wrote: Hello, My apologies for the intrusion. but I have a question that I am hoping someone has an answer to. *I have never posted to a news group, so again, my apologies if this does not meet the standard protocol. I have a bunch of Raytheon Subminiature tubes that I inherited from my Father, who was an electronics bugg (I followed a different path) that have code QF-721. *In searching the internet I have found a bunch of identical looking tubes such as one labeled CK6088. I have done lots of searches on the internet and I cannot find out anything about these and am wondering if you know about these, or if you can point me to a website that might shed some light on these. I am considering the possibility of donating these to someone but if I cannot find out what they are for, I cannot imagine how I can find who to donate them to -- perhaps a school or something. Schools arent normally interested in tubes. Generally only museums or collectors would be. NT Schools sure are not interested in tubes and one reason might be because of the high voltages involved and litigious parents who have a habit of suing schools for killing kids by electrocution during science classes, and besides, tubes are like horse and buggy technology, nice ride, but slow, and well out of date, and there's a 1,001 other more important things to teach kids about. If you can't find data at such tube data sites like http://tdsl.duncanamps.com/tubesearch.php then to find out what's inside any tube you just have to experiment to find out. Not so easy, but the principles of operation of the sub-mini tubes is the same as most others, you need a heater voltage just right, anode to cathode voltage just right, grid and other electrode voltages just right, and see what you get using meters and oscilloscope. Some sub-minies were used for hearing aid apps, so B+ was not high, nor was filament voltage and current. But principles are the same. Not many people I know bother trying to use sub-minies for anything because most apps these days use octal, mini 9 pin or 7 pin tubes and plugs and sockets. Some ppl are say the best audio preamp might be made using a sub-mini with soldered in tube leads. I can't argue with them because I've never heard a preamp using sub-minies but I have an order from a guy wanting me to build such an amp. If you search around you'll find quite a few type numbers were made, but only very few have been given special status for hi-fi amps, and those tend to be high gm twin triodes. If you donate the truckload of sub-minies you have to Mr X who says he might like to use them it is most likely they will lurk on Mr X's garage shelf until he dies and never get used, and then be chucked out to the tip within 10 years by his relatives who don't care about the useless junk. Patrick Turner. |
#3
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#4
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,rec.audio.tubes
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![]() "Patrick Turner" wrote in message ... Some sub-minies were used for hearing aid apps, so B+ was not high, nor was filament voltage and current. But principles are the same. The circa-1960s Hawk RADAR sets that I worked with in the Army were loaded with 100's of subminiature tubes. About 400 per unit. Most of them were used in applications and with voltages and signals that were usually being performed with miniature tubes. Construction-wise what internals that could be seen resembled a minature tube with most of the empty room and spacers taken out. If memory serves a dual diode was the only type with more than one function. I'm drawing a blank about dual triodes. The subminature tubes were rated to be highly rugged (they were also used in missles and artillary shells) and long-lived - at least 10,000 hours. In the equipment I worked on they were clipped onto heat sinks that underlaid the swaged-post epoxy terminal boards that the other parts and wireing were attached to. The chassis were like 19" long sheet cake pans and mounted as back-to-back pairs in pull-out drawers. Air was forced in between the chassis. The chassis were held in place by aircraft-style screw clip fasteners and all connections were via a single multi-pin connector with both shielded and unshielded pins and teflon-coated silver-plated fine stranded wiring. The filament supplies were magnetically-regulated 6.3 volts DC while the B+ was highly regulated 250 or 300 volts. The few socketed tubes were power tubes including 300A series regulators in the power supplies. Air temperature inside the equipment boxes was up to 140 degrees. |
#5
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,rec.audio.tubes
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![]() "NT" wrote in message ... On Aug 12, 11:13 pm, Robert Seely wrote: Hello, My apologies for the intrusion. but I have a question that I am hoping someone has an answer to. I have never posted to a news group, so again, my apologies if this does not meet the standard protocol. I have a bunch of Raytheon Subminiature tubes that I inherited from my Father, who was an electronics bugg (I followed a different path) that have code QF-721. In searching the internet I have found a bunch of identical looking tubes such as one labeled CK6088. I have done lots of searches on the internet and I cannot find out anything about these and am wondering if you know about these, or if you can point me to a website that might shed some light on these. http://townsendtubeworks.com/6088.htm |
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