If you need assistance, please send an email to forum at 4hv dot org. To ensure your email is not marked as spam, please include the phrase "4hv help" in the subject line. You can also find assistance via IRC, at irc.shadowworld.net, room #hvcomm.
Support 4hv.org!
Donate:
4hv.org is hosted on a dedicated server. Unfortunately, this server costs and we rely on the help of site members to keep 4hv.org running. Please consider donating. We will place your name on the thanks list and you'll be helping to keep 4hv.org alive and free for everyone. Members whose names appear in red bold have donated recently. Green bold denotes those who have recently donated to keep the server carbon neutral.
Special Thanks To:
Aaron Holmes
Aaron Wheeler
Adam Horden
Alan Scrimgeour
Andre
Andrew Haynes
Anonymous000
asabase
Austin Weil
barney
Barry
Bert Hickman
Bill Kukowski
Blitzorn
Brandon Paradelas
Bruce Bowling
BubeeMike
Byong Park
Cesiumsponge
Chris F.
Chris Hooper
Corey Worthington
Derek Woodroffe
Dalus
Dan Strother
Daniel Davis
Daniel Uhrenholt
datasheetarchive
Dave Billington
Dave Marshall
David F.
Dennis Rogers
drelectrix
Dr. John Gudenas
Dr. Spark
E.TexasTesla
eastvoltresearch
Eirik Taylor
Erik Dyakov
Erlend^SE
Finn Hammer
Firebug24k
GalliumMan
Gary Peterson
George Slade
GhostNull
Gordon Mcknight
Graham Armitage
Grant
GreySoul
Henry H
IamSmooth
In memory of Leo Powning
Jacob Cash
James Howells
James Pawson
Jeff Greenfield
Jeff Thomas
Jesse Frost
Jim Mitchell
jlr134
Joe Mastroianni
John Forcina
John Oberg
John Willcutt
Jon Newcomb
klugesmith
Leslie Wright
Lutz Hoffman
Mads Barnkob
Martin King
Mats Karlsson
Matt Gibson
Matthew Guidry
mbd
Michael D'Angelo
Mikkel
mileswaldron
mister_rf
Neil Foster
Nick de Smith
Nick Soroka
nicklenorp
Nik
Norman Stanley
Patrick Coleman
Paul Brodie
Paul Jordan
Paul Montgomery
Ped
Peter Krogen
Peter Terren
PhilGood
Richard Feldman
Robert Bush
Royce Bailey
Scott Fusare
Scott Newman
smiffy
Stella
Steven Busic
Steve Conner
Steve Jones
Steve Ward
Sulaiman
Thomas Coyle
Thomas A. Wallace
Thomas W
Timo
Torch
Ulf Jonsson
vasil
Vaxian
vladi mazzilli
wastehl
Weston
William Kim
William N.
William Stehl
Wesley Venis
The aforementioned have contributed financially to the continuing triumph of 4hv.org. They are deserving of my most heartfelt thanks.
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Accessories for valve voltmeters included an RF probe, which would have a miniature diode valve at its very tip, sometimes a wire-ended EHT rectifier like EY51.
Where very low circuit loading and high frequency response were needed, UHF acorn triodes like 955 were mounted on the very tip of a probe, so there was no wire at all between the circuit under test and the meter input circuit.
Registered Member #30
Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
Yikes! Rare earth magnets are first cousins to lighter flints, they could make a lot of sparks, maybe even catch fire if you try to cut or grind them. I think the stuff is incredibly hard and brittle: the finished magnets are heavily nickel plated to protect them.
If you let two really big, powerful neo magnets smash together under their magnetic force, from far enough away that they can get up a good speed, their lighter-flinty properties may allow them to explode with a big flash and bang. I have read of this happening on a guitar pickup makers forum, where they are used to charge the smaller Alnico magnets in the pickups.
It could be an urban myth, but then again it might not, and a lump of burning Neodymium in the eye could really ruin your day. So careful now, as Father Ted would say.
Registered Member #162
Joined: Mon Feb 13 2006, 10:25AM
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 3140
I've never had an interrest in thermionic valves - not much that solid state can't do better. As for vtvm input current, in the 70's I was using commercial parametric op-amps of 10's of fA input bias current (Teledyne I think) ... no idea what's available now.
Registered Member #3414
Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
You can't cut or grind them due to the heat generated. Above 80 C and they are no longer magnets. Nickel isn't that hard (not as hard as chrome), I'm planning to try using aluminium oxide paper wrapped around a former, with plenty of water to keep things cool. (Apparently you can drill them with diamond tipped drills, but I don't want to risk overheating the magnets)
Your comments remind me of when I was working at Harwell on their syncho-cyclotron. A weld failed on what was supposed to be a stainless part, I went to get a supermagnet from my toolbox, one of their engineers had 'assumed control' by the time I got back. He insisted I give him the magnet, an unplated one, and it flew out of his hand and smashed into what turned out to be tool steel that someone had managed to weld to the stainless. The magnet smashed and shrapnel went eveywhere (I had warned him! and subsequently told him he should have let me test it! he was in a state of shock. You'd think a Harwell physicist would know about supermagnets.). It's the same magnet that I used in the first post in this thread. (I usually wrap them in insulating tape when testing steel, just in case.) (In case anyone is wondering, 300 series austenitic stainless, which is what the part was supposed to be (316) isn't magnetic)
I actually made some neodymium pickups once (well, not neodymium, but a rare earth type that withstands higher temperatures) and I could measure the current on the milli or micro-amp range on my DMM when passing a screwdriver over it. It was pretty crude, with thickish wire. I used several 1/4" diameter ones stacked together. I was planning to build an electronic ignition system at the time, but I've not got round to it yet. The principle is the same as guitar pickups.
Registered Member #3567
Joined: Mon Jan 03 2011, 10:49PM
Location: USA, 1960s
Posts: 260
A normal $5 vtvm has a impendance of 11megohms
Ash, valves or tubes short circuit all the time. I just had a shorted tube on the tube tester some time ago. The most infamous is the heater cathode short, which is kind of hard to notice, and can cause 60hz hum to leak into the audio. A full cathode to plate is rare, the most you'll get is most likely a grid to plate.
Registered Member #30
Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
11 meg is the standard for DMMs, too. At 11 meg, 10nA of bias current will give you an 0.11V error, that is why it's important to minimise it.
The LMC660 has a headline spec of 2fA input bias current. Bob Pease was involved in those Teledyne parametric op-amps, he has a whole chapter of a book somewhere about them. You could buy three for the price of a VW Beetle, but the contents were about the same as a transistor radio, with some real black magic that, according to Pease, even the designer didn't fully understand. Teledyne Philbrick made a huge profit on them.
The LMC660 outperforms them, but you have to wash your PCB in the dishwasher.
All of this is a long way from the average 12A*7 you might find on eBay.
Registered Member #3567
Joined: Mon Jan 03 2011, 10:49PM
Location: USA, 1960s
Posts: 260
Mary is right, 10 is the standard.
Many vtvms have better numbers than 11, I have one that goes at a dc impendance of 21 mohoms. There is more to tubes than the 12ax7. There are millions of tubes, some which are far better than a audiofool run of the mill dual triode.
vtvms using special probes can measure up to 500mhz. A normal dvm can go up to 20khz
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
A like-for-like comparison between thermionic valves and solid state devices (SSD) is really a bit silly.
Valves were superceded because they became uneconomic. Every small town in England once had a repair shop to service consumer electronic goods - TVs, radios, gramophones, cine projectors - because valves in their hot confined spaces failed constantly while the parts around them slowly barbecued and changed their value, or gave up the ghost in puffs of smoke, and pools of wax.
Thermionic technology lingers on where replacement with SSD technology is uneconomic - oven and radar magnetrons, power klystrons, electron-impact photon sources, CRTs still in much of the world, gas switches like power thyratrons and pseudospark devices, and perhaps still in Russia some exotic 'hard' circuitry intended to function in the presence of EMP and intense ionizing radiation.
As a simple hobbyist with nothing more in mind than scientific amusement, I am not constrained like the factory owner to make a profit, and so can return to the technology of the past to see what entertainment it still might have to offer in the way of curious knowledge.
This site is powered by e107, which is released under the GNU GPL License. All work on this site, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 License. By submitting any information to this site, you agree that anything submitted will be so licensed. Please read our Disclaimer and Policies page for information on your rights and responsibilities regarding this site.