Questions tagged [vacuum-tube]

Any device that incorporates an evacuated chamber in which free-floating electrons are manipulated.

A vacuum tube (or valve) is a device with an evacuated chamber (usually made of glass) that has two or more electrodes, in which electrons are induced to flow among the electrodes.

There are basically two ways to induce electrons to leave an electrode: by heating it to a high temperature or by shining light on it (photoelectric effect).

A two-element tube (diode) can be used as a rectifier, since electrons will readily flow from the heated cathode to the cold anode, but not in the other direction.

Additional electrodes can be incorporated (triodes, pentodes, etc.), and these can control the flow of electrons by creating electric fields among the electrodes. These devices can be used to amplify a signal, because a small amount of voltage on the control grid can control a very large amount of current between the cathode and anode.

A stream of electrons can be formed into a beam inside the vacuum tube, and this beam can be aimed at a phosphor (cathode-ray display tube) or a metal target (X-ray tube).

As amplifying devices, vacuum tubes have largely been superceded by solid-state devices, which are generally smaller, more efficient and more reliable, except in very high-power or high-frequency applications. Vacuum tubes are still commonly used in certain niches, including microwave generation, vacuum florescent displays, and high-criticality transient-resistant circuits.

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Are traditional vacuum tubes still used anywhere?

Apart from very specialist audio amplifiers?
Dirk Bruere
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In a vacuum triode, what prevents the grid from acting as another anode?

A triode vacuum tube has three electrodes, namely an anode, a cathode and a control grid in between of those. Assuming that the filament is hot, current would readily flow from the cathode into the anode when no bias voltage is applied to the grid,…
Mark
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Why are vacuum tube filaments internal

So, I'm a little fuzzy on vacuum tube designs, but I am under the impression that some use the filament directly as the cathode, while some use the filament to heat a plate which is the cathode. Since the filament is what burns out on a vacuum tube…
Void Star
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valve tone control circuit build

Here I have built the following schematic but have encountered some problems. The treble was crackling and the bass was dropping out. I have somewhat fixed the treble issue with grounding the pots but I still have an issue with them. I think what…
Alex Anderson
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Why triodes for high power tubes

The pros and cons of triodes vs screen grid tubes like pentodes and tetrodes are well documented elsewhere. When it comes to low and medium power tubes both triodes and screen grid tubes are readily available. At the really high power levels like…
Autistic
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How to protect valve heaters from inrush during cold starts?

Some valves on the market today are rare and expensive. GEC Marconi KT66's retail for about £300 /pair today for example. Some others clearly show a bright flash as their heaters initially power up which is worrying when you see it for the first…
Paul Uszak
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How much are OT100 tubes worth and what was their specific purpose?

I got this tubes OT100 and I want to know their value, and what are they used for. They are NOS, unused and in working state.
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Running vacuum tube without grid or bias voltage

First some context: I am considering building a decoration out of a old RF power vacuum tube (like a Eimec 3-400Z, Telefunken RS630,...) with direct heated tungsten filament. I plan to get a appropriate SMPS to power only the filament for a nice…
ArchimedesMP
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Beta decay as electron source in vacuum tubes?

I've been thinking about this for a few days now, would this even be possible? There is another question like this being asked but via the photoelectric effect utilizing lasers. What if we used a nuclear electron source? Wouldn't that help with the…
Biatu
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Another question about lighting up vacuum tubes

Can anyone tell me if the 4-400 on my vacuum tube means 4 volts? How do I tell what voltage the large RCA tube is as there is only RCA 105 written on it? I'm making them into lights and want to make them glow. I understand that I connect the…
Craig
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Usage of transformers for vacuum tubes

Something I was wondering about: Why is one still using transformers for vacuum tubes? I know that they need higher voltages than usual, but do they really need AC voltages? Or can't one simply use DC/DC converters to generate this high voltage?…
arc_lupus
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What are some (bi-grid)tetrode tubes with negative resistance?

I asked earlier about Dynatron oscillator tubes but instead what I'm looking for is a bi-grid tetrode that has the "kink" in its plate-grid charactestic curve. I actually have a Sylvania 12K5 tetrode, but does that one have negative resistance? If…
Mr X
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Vacuum tube circuit behavior

I’m the following picture, how does the circuit work between points A and B? I’m confused about the polarity of the cathode in front of the heater element. Is the cathode positive? Image source: The Real McTube II by Fred Nachbaur, Dogstar Music
notaorb
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In this 6 purposes of Vacuum Tubes Video, what does "Generators" mean?

I was just checking how Vacuum Tubes worked in this very informative video Principles of Vacuum Tubes, however I was unable to understand what is the third point i.e Vacuum Tubes as "Generators". Is it the same as…
Nishant
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Raytheon JAN-6080WB Vacuum Tube question

I found this and several more, inside a old ocilloscope, I found the data sheet on it. 6.6 v, pins 7, 8, are the heater pins, but when i put power on it, i do not get a glow. are pins 7 and 8 where i put one + or - connection and somewhere else the…
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