Tube Topics
Tube Topics
Tube Topics
(Edition 2)
Introduction
Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary defines rebuild as “(a): to make extensive
repairs to; (b): to restore to a previous state”. The goal of ECONCO is to achieve
definition (b) with “a previous state” being a new tube. To accomplish this goal,
we frequently must resort to definition (a). ECONCO repairs or replaces all parts
within a tube requiring repair to attain this goal.
At ECONCO, considerable efforts are made to analyze the cause for failure
and counsel users on preventive actions. Within the design limitations of the
tube, we rebuild in a manner to minimize these types of failure. The nature of our
business requires testing large numbers of end-of-life tubes—both low emission
and catastrophic failures—giving us a unique understanding of the strengths and
weaknesses of various power tube designs. We have, in fact, conducted failure
analysis on well over 200,000 tubes from virtually every tube manufacturer in the
world.
ECONCO is happy to provide telephone support to any tube user who is
experiencing problems with a device. This service is available to all tube users
regardless of their source of tubes. We can provide copies of data sheets for
most common power tubes.
Duds are the lifeblood of the tube rebuilding business. We encourage all tube
users to sell their duds to ECONCO whether they choose to use our services or
not. Our continued presence in the industry creates competition and acts as a
restraint on price increases of new tubes.
The second edition of Tube Topics is dedicated to helping our customers
understand the rebuilding process, and—in the process—improve the reliability
of their equipment.
Contents
Basic Tube Design 1-6
Tube Maintenance 7-18
The Tube Rebuilding Process 19-25
Tube Ratings Data for Devices Rebuilt by ECONCO 26-30
1
Tube Topics
Filament Designs
Directly heated tubes have either spiral, parallel bar, hairpin, or mesh filament
structures. The spiral filament structure consists of one or two strands of wire that
are spiral wrapped around a central support rod. They are found in older, lower
power designs. Spiral filaments are subject to sagging and shorting between the
turns. As illustrated in Figure 3, the filament in (a) is normal while the filament
shown in (b) has sagged because of excess filament voltage. These particular
tubes operate inverted. Note the shorted turns at the top of (b).
(a) (b)
Figure 3. 5762/7C24 spiral filaments: (a) normal filament, (b) abnormal filament
The hairpin structure is found in many power tubes currently installed. It con-
sists of a number of parallel elements bent into the shape of a hairpin (thus the
name). The current path is up one leg, across the top, and down the adjacent
leg. Hairpin filament support structures have built in spring compensation for
thermal expansion of the filament (Figure 4.). These filament structures can have
all voltages applied without filament warm-up. Tuning will drift slightly because of
relative movement of the tube elements as they reach thermal equilibrium, but
there is no danger of shorting. Some tube designs require surge current limitation
for the filament when initially turned on. This protection should be provided for by
the equipment manufacturer and should not be bypassed.
3
Mesh filaments are composed of filament wires woven to form a basket weave
filament structure. (Figure 5.) The wire joints are spotwelded or diffusion bonded
at the intersections. Mesh filaments are being designed into most new tube
designs on the theory that a mesh filament permits a denser, more closely
spaced structure. This allows higher stage gain, increased efficiency and higher
frequency operation.
The mesh structure relies on thermal expansion of the ridged upper filament
support structure to compensate for thermal expansion of the filament. The
current path is from the base, up through mesh filament, across top, and down
through the center support rod Mesh filaments require slower warm-up as the
thin, low mass filament wires come to temperature immediately as voltage is
applied. As they heat, they expand, and until the more massive and slower to
heat support structures reach their operating temperature to compensate for this
expansion, the filament wires warp in and out. A warped filament greatly
increases the possibility of a thermal grid-to-filament short circuit. Common
precautions for filament operation are detailed in Section 2.5 (“Filament
Voltage”). Attention to filament voltage is vital to long life and stable operation of
filamentary tubes.
1.2 Grids
Grid elements are generally formed of wires spotwelded together to form a
circular structure that completely surrounds the emitting surface of the filament.
The grid controls the flow of electrons from the filament. Grids are coated with
various materials compounded to manage the emission of electrons from the
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grid. If emission of electrons from the grid is uncontrolled, it can result in high
distortion or a destructive runaway effect in the tube.
1.3 Anode
Anodes are copper cylinders or drawn cups that collect the flow of electrons
within a tube. They have air cooling fins, vapor cooling surfaces, or water cooling
jackets brazed to their exterior in order to remove the heat generated by the
power not transferred to the load.
Plating
The external metal parts of tubes are plated with nickel or silver. Tubes that go
into sockets are normally silver plated. The soft silver provides a better contact
interface than the much harder nickel; it deforms slightly under contact pressure
providing greater contact area. Silver plating has a dull, whitish cast, whereas
nickel has a hard metallic appearance.
Nickel is resistant to discoloration resulting from heat at normal tube operating
temperatures, while silver will tarnish easily. Often, the heat patterns on silver
plated tubes are helpful in problem analysis. If a nickel plated tube shows any
sign of heat discoloration, a significant cooling or operational problem exists.
Nickel will not discolor until it reaches a temperature much higher than a tube will
reach under normal conditions. If a nickel plated tube discolors, abnormal
operating conditions are present.
Safety
Power tubes and the equipment they are installed in have electrical voltages
present that can be lethal. The access panels to all high voltage cabinets should
be installed. All interlocks should be operating and never bypassed. High voltage
cabinets should be equipped with a shorting bar, which should be directly
grounded. The bar is used to ground all high voltage areas before reaching into
them to work on or inspect any components.
Proper equipment design requires that all high voltage circuits have bleeder
resistors to bleed off any residual charge to ground when the equipment is turned
off. Full discharge by these bleeder circuits may take several seconds.
1.4 Sockets
Prior to installing a tube, it is wise to inspect the socket to determine if there are
any broken pieces of fingerstock. Broken pieces of fingerstock can fall into the
equipment causing shorts and other damage. They should be located and
removed prior to installation of the tube. Individual finger contacts can break off
on occasion and as long as they are located and removed, the socket ring does
not require replacement. If more than 20 percent of fingerstock are broken off,
the contact ring should be replaced. Consecutive gaps around the tube can
cause improper tuning, instability, and lead to premature failure.
Repair kits are available for most sockets from manufacturers. This method is
far cheaper than replacing the entire socket. ECONCO is happy to advise a tube
user as to where specific socket replacement parts can be obtained.
5
Socket Problems
Loose contact on a tube socket will always lead to problems. Some socket
designs have a wire-wound spring encircling the outside circumference of the
fingerstock to increase individual finger contact pressure. These should be
replaced if they break or lose tension. Adequate contact pressure is vital for
proper operation and long life. Some sockets have stops that are set so that the
tube has the grid contacts in the middle of the contact area when fully inserted.
This positioning can be checked by inserting and then removing a new tube. The
scratch marks on the grid contacts will show the position of the tube relative to
the socket contacts.
Figure 6 shows a burned and melted grid ring on an industrial triode. This fail-
ure was caused by poor contact between the grid ring and the socket.
Tube Insertion
Gently rock and slightly rotate the tube as it is being inserted into the socket. This
helps avoid bending and breaking of fingerstock. Be sure to apply sufficient force
to seat the tube all the way into the socket. Never use a lever or hammer on the
tube to set it into the socket. Manual pressure should be adequate. An
intermediate point is reached when the grid contact fingerstock slides up the tube
sides and first contacts the connection areas. It is important to be sure the tube is
fully inserted in the socket beyond this initial point of resistance.
operation. Stainless steel has a much lower coefficient of thermal expansion than
copper.
All bolted or screwed connections should be tight. It is important to check that the
clamps are snug, providing good electrical contact around the entire circumfer-
ence of the contact area. Because of the radio frequency fields present, all
clamps and bolts should be made from non-magnetic materials. Copper, brass,
or non-magnetic Series 300 stainless steel fasteners are preferred. Stainless
steel is not a good conductor of electricity, and while it is used for clamping, it
should not be part of the current path.
7
Tube Topics
2.3 Tuning
Each equipment manufacturer provides instruction or guidelines for proper tuning
and operation of their systems, which should be followed closely when adjusting
the equipment.
Operate the power tubes in the equipment at their rated filament voltage when-
ever tuning or adjusting the equipment—not at reduced levels. This assures ade-
quate emission levels from the tube and reduces the chances of low filament
voltage masking performance levels that should be achieved through proper
tuning and adjustment. After all adjustments are complete, the filament voltage
may be set (as described in Section 2.5) to achieve maximum tube life.
Metering
The metering of filament voltage on the majority of equipment is not accurate.
Often the metering is a multimeter that is switched to read various operating
parameters. To be useful for filament metering, the meter must be calibrated to
read voltage at the tube socket and must be capable of being read accurately to
one tenth of a volt. Often the filament voltage is measured at the output of the
filament transformer. In high current circuits such as the filament, the voltage
drop in the wires going to the tube can be significant. All filament meters should
be calibrated with an accurate iron-vane or rms-responding digital meter. The
object is to determine the heating value of the power being supplied to the
filament. The calibration voltage should be taken at the tube socket or
connections with the filament operating. This will compensate for any line drop
losses. In locations where the line voltage fluctuates more than 5 percent, the
supply to the filament transformer should be equipped with a constant-voltage
transformer (i.e., Sola transformer). A diagram of a filament supply circuit
capable of precise adjustment over the most beneficial voltage range is shown in
Figure 7. The circuit given assumes a 240 V supply to the circuit. Specific design
criteria include the following:
• Component 1. Sola constant-voltage transformer connected to the supply line;
sized for the KVA rating of filament.
• Component 2. Variac variable auto transformer controlling a fixed step-down
transformer connected in a buck or boost configuration; KVA rating equal to 10
percent of the filament KVA.
• Component 3. A 240-to-24 volt secondary fixed transformer; KVA rating ≥ 10
percent of the filament KVA.
• Component 4. The existing filament transformer.
Mount the variable transformer such that it is adjustable from the control panel
of the equipment. This will allow adjustment of the filament voltage while the
equipment is operating. Unfortunately many transmitters and most industrial
equipment are built with a filament transformer that has, at the most, taps located
inside the equipment for the adjustment of filament voltage. If the equipment is
operated for long periods of time, the filament circuit should be modified as
shown.
10
Filament Operation
The thoriated tungsten filaments used in power vacuum tubes depend upon suffi-
cient filament temperature to provide adequate electron emission for normal
operation. Power tubes should not be operated in the emission-limited mode.
The use of filament voltage to control output power is not the correct method of
operation. It will destroy a tube quicker than operation at higher than permissible
voltages.
The operator, by adjusting the filament voltage, can control the operating tem-
perature. Each tube is unique; while one tube may make full operating power at a
filament voltage of 7.3 V, a replacement device may require 7.4 V to attain the
same power. It is for this reason that we recommend all tuning be done at the
rated filament voltage. After tuning is complete, then the voltage can be reduced
to provide extended life.
Though cathodic type tubes can be damaged by operation of the heater at
reduced filament voltage, we have never seen a case where operation at the
proper reduced voltage after tuning is anything but beneficial to directly heated
filamentary tubes. It is important, however, to operate the tube at rated voltage
for the first 100 to 200 hours before reducing it as described in the next section.
limited voltage allows for minor line fluctuations and requires less frequent
adjustment as the tube ages.
A power tube operated in this manner will generally yield life 50 percent
greater than a tube run continuously at rated filament voltage. If the tube is
removed and then replaced, it is not necessary to run it at rated voltage beyond
the time necessary to tune the equipment.
Figure 8 illustrates the impact of filament voltage on peak emissions with a
common tetrode. Figure 9 charts filament current as a function of operating
hours.
Catastrophic Failures
A catastrophic failure can take on a number of forms, however, the symptoms
are usually the same: overload relay trips and/or circuit breaker trips. Repeated
attempts to restart the equipment can cause damage to the circuitry so it is good
practice to troubleshoot the system immediately upon the first indication of over-
load. To begin, make a visual inspection of the high voltage areas of the
equipment. Look for burned wires and components. If you have reason to
suspect the tube, remove it, making sure that the high voltage connections are
located so as to prevent shorting to ground or other components. With the tube
removed, reapply voltages. If the equipment does not trip off, then you can be
reasonably sure that the problem is the tube or the tube/circuit interface. At this
point, unless a specific problem has been found, we recommend that the tube be
sent to ECONCO for testing and analysis.
Catastrophic failures can be caused either by broken or warped elements
shorting to each other within the tube, or a puncture in the vacuum envelope
allowing air to enter the device. Air in a tube causes a loss of dielectric standoff
between the internal tube elements. Both shorted elements and loss of vacuum
will cause overloads in operating equipment.
Catastrophic failures that occur during initial installation are usually the result
of broken elements. Those that occur after initial operation are more likely the
result of a loss of vacuum. In either case, continued efforts to bring the tube up
can result in considerable damage to the tube and other components. Overloads
and circuit breakers are not fast enough to forestall many types of damage.
Intermittent Failures
Intermittent overloads (kickoffs) are the hardest to pin down. They can be caused
by circuit operating conditions or internal tube failures. In transmitters, they can
be the result of a broken or warped filament moving around and occasionally
short-circuiting to the grid, causing loss of grid bias. Loss of grid bias in tubes
requiring a bias voltage allows full plate current to flow, activating the overload
protection circuit(s). In industrial applications, intermittent overloads can also be
caused by shorting across the load.
Performance Failures
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Performance failures occur when the equipment will not produce normal output
with the normal operating values set. One method of quickly checking to
determine if low emission in the tube is the likely cause is to raise the filament
voltage several tenths of a volt. If the output increases dramatically, then you can
be quite sure that the problem is low emission. No danger of burning out the
filament exists, as most designs are capable of temporarily withstanding twice
their rated filament voltage. Raise the filament voltage to a point where the output
returns to normal. If voltage in excess of rated normal is required, the tube is due
for replacement. For short periods of time, you can run the filament in excess of
normal rated voltage, however in a tube with a mesh or spiral filament, the risk of
thermal shorting is increased. In any case, the tube should be replaced as soon
as possible when full output can no longer be obtained at rated filament voltage.
(a) (b)
Figure 9. Anode dissipation patterns on two 4CX15000A tubes: (a) excessive heating,
(b) normal wear
15
• Figure 10. Base-heating patterns on two 4CX15000A tubes. Tube (a) shows
evidence of excessive heating because of high filament voltage or lack of
cooling air directed toward the base of the device. Tube (b) shows a typical
heating pattern with normal filament voltage.
(a) (b)
Figure 10. Base heating patterns on two 4CX15000A tubes: (a) excessive heating,
(b) normal wear
• Figure 11. A 4CX5000A tube with burning on the screen-to-anode ceramic.
Exterior arcing of this type generally indicates a socketing problem, or another
condition external to the tube.
• Figure 12. The stem portion of a 4CX15000A tube that had gone down to air
while the filament was on. Note the deposits of tungsten oxide formed when
the filament burned up. The grids are burned and melted because of the
ionization arcs that subsequently occurred. A failure of this type will trip
overload breakers in the RF generator. It is indistinguishable from a short-
circuited tube in operation.
• Figure 13. A 4CX15000A tube that experienced arcing typical of a bent finger-
stock, or exterior arcing caused by components other than the tube.
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Storage
Tubes should be wrapped in a plastic bag to protect them from moisture and
stored in their shipping boxes. If it is necessary to store tubes loose, they should
be located so as to reduce the chance of accidental breakage resulting from
dropping or shock. Also, the should not stored in high-moisture environments.
Handling
Power tubes are fragile. Filaments can be broken by setting the tube down too
hard on a solid surface. Do not lie a tube on its side; the filaments can break if it
rolls along a surface. Some radio frequency industrial equipment is routinely
moved to various locations within a plant. Equipment used in this manner should
be equipped with air filled casters, never solid casters
Marking
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Never write on any portion of the ceramic or on any contact surface. Some engi-
neers are in the habit of writing notes on the tube bodies for record keeping pur-
poses, but this is not a good practice. Use a separate note card instead.
Shelf Life
Modern power tubes with metal and ceramic vacuum envelopes are not prone to
gassing up while in storage. Experience indicates that these tube types can be
stored indefinitely without deterioration. It is not necessary to periodically rotate
them through an operating socket to degas the tube. Experience shows that you
stand a greater chance of breaking the tube or socket fingerstock than any
benefit gained by degassing.
Older designs, using glass as an insulating medium, do tend to leak gas over
time. It is not the glass that is porous to gas, but the Kovar alloy used to seal the
glass to metal parts in the tube. Kovar is also subject to rusting when moisture is
present. Such devices should be kept in a sealed plastic bag in storage and
rotated through the equipment at least once every twelve months. Physically, the
larger the tube, the more surface area of Kovar, and the greater the possibility of
gassing up.
Degassing
Tubes that may have gassed up can be partially degassed by putting them in the
equipment and running them for several hours with filament voltage only applied.
After the initial filament-only degassing; operation for an hour or so at reduced
plate and screen voltages is desirable. This allows the getter to soak up and hold
any residual gasses. In directly-heated filamentary tubes, the getters are
generally zirconium-bearing materials, which depend on heat to activate the
gettering action.
Manufacturers Support
ECONCO is happy to provide telephone support to any tube user who is
experiencing problems with a tube. This service is available to all tube users
regardless of their source of tubes. We can provide copies of data sheets for
most common power tubes.
19
Tube Topics
from about one microamp to nearly one milliamp on large tubes. This reading
includes currents from inter-element leakage or grid emission. It is almost
impossible to separate the components of this test.
A more accurate gas evaluation can be obtained by the IZ test, which con-
verts the tube under test to an ion gauge. An ion gauge has the anode
operating at a negative potential. The control grid is operated positive and the
current controlled by adjusting the filament voltage. Gas ions are neutralized
on the anode and the neutralizing current is measured. This test is a true
measure of internal gas. IZ currents range from hundredths of a microampere
to not over one microamp.
• Peak Emission. In this test the saturated emission capability of the cathode is
evaluated. If the emission is low, it is an indication of reduced cathode activity,
and performance can be affected. Emission is evaluated with the tube
connected as a diode with high voltage pulses (2500 V) applied across the
tube and the resulting cathode current measured.
The previous tests define and identify a tube type. However, tube operation
involves a more complex set of conditions. Fortunately, it is possible to simulate
worst case conditions on all types. Constant current curves for each type are
published. These curves are used by engineers to establish operating
parameters during equipment design. These curves make it possible to
accurately predict the power output and element currents. Using the constant
current curves, it is possible to select the most demanding combination of
instantaneous voltages and currents for any application. This point is normally
found at the lowest anode voltage, highest anode current, and maximum drive
voltage. At ECONCO, we use pulse techniques to measure the peak
instantaneous values of the drive voltage and all electrode currents, and
compare them to the published data. Figure 14 shows an oscilloscope
presentation of the drive voltage and a current on a test console. In analyzing
tube performance, it is frequently of great importance how the currents divide
between the tube elements.
Tube Topics