Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hello,
What does it mean when a tube pegs the meter on a tube tester. I have a pair of 6SN7 tubes that I have tested on a calibrated TV-7D/U tube tester, and each triode test at about 90-94 except one.........it pegs the meter. Is this tube good to use? Thanks, Kelly |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
What does it mean when a tube pegs the meter on a tube tester.
I have a pair of 6SN7 tubes that I have tested on a calibrated TV-7D/U tube tester, and each triode test at about 90-94 except one... it pegs the meter. Is this tube good to use? "This tube goes all the way to 11!" Assuming it's an emissions-type tester, one of the tube's elements is probably shorted to the cathode. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() KSM wrote: Hello, What does it mean when a tube pegs the meter on a tube tester. I have a pair of 6SN7 tubes that I have tested on a calibrated TV-7D/U tube tester, and each triode test at about 90-94 except one.........it pegs the meter. Is this tube good to use? Thanks, Kelly It probably has a short between two of the elements. I'd be extremely cautious about using the tube, unless it was in a circuit that was self-limiting (i.e. high enough plate resistance) to prevent excessive current from flowing. Even then I'd take some careful measurements and keep a close eye on it. Cheers, Fred -- +--------------------------------------------+ | Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ | | Projects: http://dogstar.dantimax.dk | +--------------------------------------------+ |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
wouldn't a short between elements have already shown up on the shorting test
(that's the first step on my AVO 3)? === Andy Evans === Visit our Website:- http://www.artsandmedia.com Audio, music and health pages and interesting links. |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Andy Evans wrote: wouldn't a short between elements have already shown up on the shorting test (that's the first step on my AVO 3)? === Andy Evans === Visit our Website:- http://www.artsandmedia.com Audio, music and health pages and interesting links. I don't know about AVO's, but on my B&K 747B I have run into the occasional tube that pegs the meter without displaying a short on the little neon lamp "short" tester (and also doesn't work as expected in circuit). Maybe it's a question of *degree*, or perhaps some shorts only show up at higher voltages. Not sure. ::shrug:: Cheers, Fred -- +--------------------------------------------+ | Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ | | Projects: http://dogstar.dantimax.dk | +--------------------------------------------+ |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
on my TV-7D/U it test good with no shorts (on short test).
"Fred Nachbaur" wrote in message news:TCdmc.2534$uN4.254@clgrps12... Andy Evans wrote: wouldn't a short between elements have already shown up on the shorting test (that's the first step on my AVO 3)? === Andy Evans === Visit our Website:- http://www.artsandmedia.com Audio, music and health pages and interesting links. I don't know about AVO's, but on my B&K 747B I have run into the occasional tube that pegs the meter without displaying a short on the little neon lamp "short" tester (and also doesn't work as expected in circuit). Maybe it's a question of *degree*, or perhaps some shorts only show up at higher voltages. Not sure. ::shrug:: Cheers, Fred -- +--------------------------------------------+ | Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ | | Projects: http://dogstar.dantimax.dk | +--------------------------------------------+ |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() KSM wrote: on my TV-7D/U it test good with no shorts (on short test). It would be interesting to see if it is, indeed, merely a particularly "hot" 6SN7. The only way to do this reliably would be to do some in-circuit measurements of gain and operating point, referenced to a "bogey" tube that reads close to 100% on your tester. It would ideally be in a common-cathode circuit with no local feedback (unbypassed cathode resistor), as a circuit with feedback or a voltage follower would give erroneous results. Cheers, Fred -- +--------------------------------------------+ | Music: http://www3.telus.net/dogstarmusic/ | | Projects: http://dogstar.dantimax.dk | +--------------------------------------------+ |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Kelly,
It has been my experience that tubes that are slightly gassy can exhibit high GM readings without any shorts. My money is on 'gas'. Carroll "KSM" wrote in message ink.net... Hello, What does it mean when a tube pegs the meter on a tube tester. I have a pair of 6SN7 tubes that I have tested on a calibrated TV-7D/U tube tester, and each triode test at about 90-94 except one.........it pegs the meter. Is this tube good to use? Thanks, Kelly |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Fred Nachbaur wrote in message news:Qovmc.27021$U75.21311@edtnps89...
KSM wrote: on my TV-7D/U it test good with no shorts (on short test). It would be interesting to see if it is, indeed, merely a particularly "hot" 6SN7. The only way to do this reliably would be to do some in-circuit measurements of gain and operating point, referenced to a "bogey" tube that reads close to 100% on your tester. It would ideally be in a common-cathode circuit with no local feedback (unbypassed cathode resistor), as a circuit with feedback or a voltage follower would give erroneous results. Cheers, Fred I have a bunch of 6V6's that ping the needle on my Eico 667 tester.They seem fine otherwise,and the handfull that I was playing with in a couple amps all worked fine.I suppose they could be a little gassy,I think they are all somewhat used tubes,pulled from old amps and radios,but they're still kickin! ;-) Hmm,I have noticed that this tester is kinda "funny" with certain tubes,maybe the settings I have are incorrect? |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 05 May 2004 20:23:06 +0000, KSM wrote:
Hello, What does it mean when a tube pegs the meter on a tube tester. I have a pair of 6SN7 tubes that I have tested on a calibrated TV-7D/U tube tester, and each triode test at about 90-94 except one.........it pegs the meter. Is this tube good to use? Thanks, Kelly Turn the bias control up a hair and see if the needle comes back into range where you can read it. If so, it should be OK, if it just keeps pegging the meter even with the bias turned up, it's shorted. The setting on a TV7 has the 6SN7 & 6CG7's reading fairly high on the meter so it's not terribly unusual for a few out of a batch to peg the meter. -- Ned Carlson Triode Electronics Chicago,IL USA www.triodeelectronics.com |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Ned Carlson" wrote in message ...
The setting on a TV7 has the 6SN7 & 6CG7's reading fairly high on the meter so it's not terribly unusual for a few out of a batch to peg the meter. Perhaps so, but I'd be damned careful about retesting it with the bias up just a bit - assuming it passed for shorts first while being tapped, I'd open the bias all the way up & barely use the test button for the shortest possible indication, to see if it wanted to peg again, if I didn't just forget it & chuck it. TV7 meters are quick to toast, hard to find, harder to repair and expensive if one is lucky. 6SN7's are plentiful & cheap. Pegging a TV7 meter is a high-risk proposition and it is wise to throw a couple of $0.02 1N4007's across it for a teeny bit of (not foolproof) protection. |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 08 May 2004 14:01:51 +0000, lbrty4u wrote:
"Ned Carlson" wrote in message ... The setting on a TV7 has the 6SN7 & 6CG7's reading fairly high on the meter so it's not terribly unusual for a few out of a batch to peg the meter. Perhaps so, but I'd be damned careful about retesting it with the bias up just a bit - assuming it passed for shorts first while being tapped, I'd open the bias all the way up & barely use the test button for the shortest possible indication, to see if it wanted to peg again, if I didn't just forget it & chuck it. A good 6SN7 reads way over to the right on a TV7 (the minimum is 50) the way it is, so it's certainly possible a few really hot ones would peg the meter, since that's nearly within tolerance of what a good one would test. Otherwise I wouldn't have made the suggestion. If this were, say,a 12AX7 or 5U4 we were talking about, which normally read quite a bit lower, I'd assume anything that pegs the meter was shorted, since that's so high as to be abnormal. IIRC, the short light on a TV7 won't light up unless the short is something like 250K ohms or less, and shorts of a much higher resistance can cause a tube not to work properly in circuit. -- Ned Carlson Triode Electronics Chicago,IL USA www.triodeelectronics.com |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
tube tester question | Vacuum Tubes | |||
Tube Newbie Question: Any help would be greatly appreciated. | Vacuum Tubes | |||
One for the Tube Grabbers | Vacuum Tubes | |||
Need Tube Testing Settings for 7868 Output Tubes | Vacuum Tubes | |||
Lowrey organ problem...general tube question. | Vacuum Tubes |