On Mon, 27 Feb 2017 19:26:17 -0800 (PST), Phil Allison
wrote:
wrote:
And then there were those old 1B3 tubes in TV sets. Where did the 1 volt
heater voltage come from? (and why didn't they just stick with 6.3 volts
like other tubes?)
** Like all rectifier tubes, the cathode is the output point and in this case can be up to +26kv above ground.
The 6.3V heater chain used by other tubes cannot be used as a 26kV insulation barrier would stop all heat getting to the cathode. So the tube cathode is directly heated by a winding that floats at the HT voltage.
http://www.radiomuseum.org/tubes/tube_1b3.html
Since the load current is 50mA max, a low powered heater is enough - 1.25V and 200ma do the job.
The 1.25V needed is conveniently derived by a single turn around the HOT core, carried out with wire insulted to stand 20kV or more.
.... Phil
God you are old.
--
Boris
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