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Hits: 4535 Replies: 3
6j45b-v (6j45b-v) dissected
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Marc Gianella
06.Oct.11 |
1
This pentode has a grooved bulb and it is difficult to identify the construction. A similar construction with rods instead of wire grids seems possible.
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Michael Watterson
06.Oct.11 |
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Is g1 fine wire mesh? It's hard to tell from photo. It's interesting and looks a little like a hybrid of rod tube and "regular" valve. But I'm not sure exactly what I'm looking at. I've seen various sellers (not all eBay) with Russian valves that seem unusual. Western development seems to have ground to a halt in late 1950s with little Domestic change after 1955. Of course most of these unusual Russian types (with possibly development up to mid 1970s) are for military only.
The 1p24b-v also has a grooved tube. The grooves make a lot of reflections!
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Marc Gianella
07.Oct.11 |
3
G1 isn't fine mesh, it's around 70 fine wires in parallel over the window.
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Michael Watterson
07.Oct.11 |
4
Thanks, Maybe what you call a Mesh I'd call perforations :-) OK, so the G1 grid wires, a kind of fine "mesh" in one direction. I see a few valves where G2 is a looser mesh or wire coil than G1. An RF beam tetrode may indeed bring out the G3 separate. For ordinary Pentode / Beam tetrode application in "common cathode" mode it's safe to internally connect G3. But if you use the valve in common grid with drive to cathode then internal G3 to Cathode would make an oscillator. In such a case the G3 is connected to RF ground. (might not actually be 0V). So a separate G3 connection on a Pentode or Beam tetrode always suggests possible RF application and gives the greatest flexibility. I've never analysed Common Anode (also more usually called Cathode follower) if G3 connected to Cathode is a problem. It's likely not ideal. This is I think a good article on Beam Tetrode and Pentode The ECL82 (PCL82) and ECL86 (PCL86) are in fact really Triode and Beam Tetrode in one tube, not a regular Pentode. The EF86 Pentode has of course G3 on separate connection for most flexibility of use such as even common Grid mode. So the 6j45b does look to me like the "beam tetrode" family of Pentode, and not too many of those I think have the "beam plates" (usually referred as g3) to a separate connection. The rod pentodes show though that the Russian designers experts on electrostatic focus, and the the beam forming plates I think work a similar way to G3 in rod Pentode as those are to side of the beam, and the Rod Pentodes also have twin beams and two anodes. I believe the DL92 B7G miniature Pentode has no G3 wires, but also is in reality a Beam Tetrode. |
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