[Boatanchors] Mercury Vapor Rectifier Lore Needed

Wilson infomet at embarqmail.com
Sat Oct 12 11:58:07 EDT 2013


Thanks all.
This is thinking...red hitemp stuff from the auto parts store...I already 
have it!
Will try.
WL

-----Original Message----- 
From: Fuqua, Bill L
Sent: Saturday, October 12, 2013 10:37 AM
To: jfor at quikus.com ; Wilson
Cc: BOATANCHORS
Subject: RE: [Boatanchors] Mercury Vapor Rectifier Lore Needed

   RTV does not shrink, it is sticks well and holds up to high temperatures.
However, with tubes like 866A's you may want to use something other than the 
clear stuff.
It can be affected by UV radiation. A black or red RTV could limit the 
penetration depth of
the UV.

73
Bill wa4lav

________________________________________
From: Boatanchors [boatanchors-bounces at puck.nether.net] on behalf of J. 
Forster [jfor at quikus.com]
Sent: Saturday, October 12, 2013 10:23 AM
To: Wilson
Cc: BOATANCHORS
Subject: Re: [Boatanchors] Mercury Vapor Rectifier Lore Needed

I've posted before you should not use epoxy or superglue on tube bases.

You should use euther:

A Sauereisen cement (which is what was originally used, I thnk)
Clear, unfilled RTV
Possibly Gorilla glue.

-John

========================



> I’ve been resurrecting some gear with 866s in it, and Wonder about some
> of the things I’m seeing.
> I’ve used 866s all my life, but never thought much about them, except
> good or bad.
>
> Some have much more glow than others, and the more glow the whiter.   Is
> this because of air getting in?
> Some have what looks like shards of metallic stuff on the glass.  Is this
> a coating off the plate?
> Last night, I had one that glowed pretty white, but also had a neat ring
> of fire dancing around the anode, with fingers pointing outward.  What was
> going on there?
> Sometimes one will are over inside and blow fuses, etc.  How can that
> happen, if the plate and filament are not out of position?
> I recently had a big flash from the back of the rack, accompanied by a
> colossal bang, as loud as a .22 LR shot!
> I looked all over the PS for evidence of arcing, but didn’t find any.
> Later, I took hold of the 866 to take it out and the whole bulb came off
> in my hand!
> It broke perfectly cleanly, right around where it went into the base.
> This has now happened twice and I’ve never seen it before.
> Both these tubes were loose in their bases, so I shot in some superglue to
> hold them.
> Could it be that the superglue bound them so tightly to the bases that
> they couldn’t expand and broke from stress concentration?
> Or could it have been that the superglue caused a thermal stress
> concentration in the class.
> Anyone ever see one break this way?
> Wilson
> W4BOH
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> Boatanchors at puck.nether.net
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>
>


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