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Components and Circuits For discussions about component types, alternatives and availability, circuit configurations and modifications etc. Discussions here should be of a general nature and not about specific sets. |
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#21 |
Nonode
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Redruth, Cornwall, UK.
Posts: 2,450
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That's a strange looking valve John.
The base seems to be odd as well since the Philips/Mullard numbering system would suggest it should have a B9A base when there's an 8 in the first part of the valve number. Regards Symon. |
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#22 | ||
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Papamoa Beach, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
Posts: 2,908
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Cheers, |
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#23 |
Rest in Peace
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Ripley, Derbyshire, UK.
Posts: 785
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#24 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, UK.
Posts: 7,377
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A Mazda PL36 which I guess is of DDR manufacture. "Foreign Made"
The beam forming plates can clearly be seen. As soon as I can find a faulty Mullard PL36 I'll open it up to determine if it is a true pentode, that is one with a suppressor grid or it has a similar construction as the one shown in the attachments. DFWB. |
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#25 |
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Papamoa Beach, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
Posts: 2,908
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Yes, that looks like a classic beam tetrode. It also has the anti-Barkhausen anode surface projections discussed in the RCA literature, but not the cavity anode of the PL500.
Something that comes to mind from looking at those pictures is that the beam tetrode, with its relatively large screen-to-anode spacing, may have had a structural advantage over the pentode (apart from other advantages) in terms of its ability to handle high peak anode voltages. From the PL81 through the PL519, the stated maximum peak anode voltage was 7 kV. For the UL44 it was 3 kV, and for the PL38 it was 1.2 kV. These numbers suggests that possibly the “break” point, the transition from pentode to beam tetrode, was between the UL44 and the PL81. It is difficult to be sure from the pictures, but it looks as if the PL36 might have had the same base arrangement, that is a glass button base slotted into an octal base, as the EL34. Cheers, |
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#26 | |
Dekatron
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, UK.
Posts: 7,377
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There are few examples of the valve about in the shop including examples made by other manufactures. DFWB. |
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#27 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Warnham, West Sussex. 10 miles south of DORKING.
Posts: 9,127
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Time to confess.. The 'odd' PL81 is a very early [1929] Mazda tetrode AC/SG. The words MOV and HAMMERSMITH were added with a simple photo programme given away with my digi camera. History will never be the same again. End of story.
The PL81 must have been the most widely employed line output valve. The PL36 did not see use in British receivers until around 1957. It was probably Mazda that sowed the seeds with the introduction of the 200m/a heater 20P4 in 1953. This was a very good valve, one of the bright spots from Mazda. The PL36 must have been in service the longest with the ITT VC series mono chassis, around 10 years at least. Thorn were early users of the PL500/504 introduced in the 900 chassis of 1964. It's all glass base offered easier assembly in printed circuit receivers and it was a very good valve. Many were changed in the hope of clearing width stabilization faults due to high value resistors but I dobt if many were actually faulty. All these valves were developed from the original tiny PL81 and it must have been quite a shock to early television repair guys when they first encountered it! The PL38 was around four times the size! John. |
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#28 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, UK.
Posts: 7,377
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Three Tungsram EL38s. The one on the left has a different electrode structure and resembles the American 6BG6G in some respects.
It was made in England but certainly does not have a Philips/Mullard look about it. It is designated as EL38 and not the usual American number 6CN6 as it and many other Tungsram valves in the 50s and 60s were. The other two are of Mullard Blackburn origin. The EL38 had a predecessor, the EL50 which was intoduced in 1939. The EL50was used as the line output valve in the Pye 915 TV chassis. Model 12C. Earlier Pye TVs used the Mazda AC6/PEN. Models 815 and 838. DFWB. |
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#29 |
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Papamoa Beach, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
Posts: 2,908
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Regarding the PL500 and its cavitrap anode, there is a brief description at this web page: http://www.thevalvepage.com/valvetek...2/wheotip2.htm. The paragraph is towards the bottom of the page. It confirms that the primary purpose of the cavitrap anode was to limit secondary emission.
Cheers, |
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#30 |
Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Ipswich, Suffolk, IP4, UK.
Posts: 20,660
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Thread reopened.
__________________
Graham. Forum Moderator Reach for your meter before you reach for your soldering iron. |
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#31 | |
Hexode
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Konongo, Ghana
Posts: 468
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As far as I know, the PL81 always was a beam tetrode. I never saw evidence that the first PL81's had suppressor grids instead of beam forming plates. In my view, Philips/Mullard calling the PL81 a pentode has no meaning in this respect. Philips used the designation "output pentode" also for valves that were clearly beam tetrodes, like for instance the PL36, and the power section in the ECL82. Philips sometimes also used the designation "tetrode". The QQV03/10, which does have beam forming plates, is an example of this. See: https://www.vintage-radio.net/forum/...43&postcount=7. Only later on Philips occasionally used the more correct designation, like "beam power tube" (see for instance the PL500, the successor of the PL36). But the later PL509 and PL519 were again designated as "line output pentode", while they surely are beam tetrodes. My guess is that within the Philips group there was some kind of unwritten rule not use the term "beam power tube" or "beam tetrode" because the beam tetrode (a British invention) was patent-wise the answer to the pentode (invented by Philips).
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#32 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Lynton, N. Devon, UK.
Posts: 6,941
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They probably decided that the competitor's technology was more suitable in some applications, paid the royalties but didn't let on to the outside world.
And I guess the holders of the beam tetrode patent forgot to insist that the valves were designated as such (maybe didn't care, but that seems unlikely!) so Philips, after quietly paying the royalties, flogged them as pentodes. The DL92 'pentode' is definitely a BT, but interestingly the later DL96 is a true pentode. Coming back to the PL81 / EL81, although rated less than the EL84 in terms of anode dissipation, has a much higher current capability (just compare heater powers necessary to heat the larger cathode!) so makes for a more powerful Class B audio amplifier - and of course is much better suited to line output duties. |
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#33 |
Hexode
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Powys, Mid-Wales, UK.
Posts: 283
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There is a description of the cavitrap PL500 but it is auf Deutch.
DFWB. Here's the translation, according to DeepL Almost 3 decades earlier, on September 9, 1932, RCA tube designer Edward Herold applied for a patent for a novel output tetrode that used a specially shaped anode to strongly suppress secondary electrons even at low anode voltages, eliminating the need for a suppresor grid. This tube has only a control grid and a screen grid above one or two low-profile cathodes, followed by the anode. It is therefore an output tetrode, which is superior to output pentodes, especially when operating at low anode voltage. This tube was introduced in December 1932 as Type 48. Translated with DeepL |
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#34 | |
Heptode
Join Date: Oct 2019
Location: Täby, Sweden
Posts: 542
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I have this link ... Mullard-Circuits-for-Audio-Amplifiers ... and Chapter 8 is a DC/AC amp, but alas not a PL81. |
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#35 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Lynton, N. Devon, UK.
Posts: 6,941
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It's in here, Richard, and it is No 8, as encyclopaedic Steve Synchrodyne has correctly said!
Curious circuit, using the ECL80 triode circuit as an oscillator to develop the -30V (approx) grid bias for the PL81's without eating away at the total HT voltage as would be the case with cathode bias. And the 'L section of the ECL80 is the phase inverter, operating at sub-milliamp levels... I'm left thinking why not use a PCF80? Last edited by kalee20; 12th Sep 2023 at 12:59 pm. |
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#36 | |
Dekatron
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Cornwall, UK.
Posts: 13,452
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Lawrence. |
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#37 |
Heptode
Join Date: Oct 2019
Location: Täby, Sweden
Posts: 542
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Thanks for that document.
That was an interesting circuit! Apart from the bias arrangement, there is that feedback, the tone control, lots of food for thought! |
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#38 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Lynton, N. Devon, UK.
Posts: 6,941
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It is interesting! In fact cathode bias wouldn't be much good with Class B anyway - look at the variation of current with signal, 32mA quiescent, 82mA max signal. (Ideal Class B would of course be zero quiescent).
It does utilise the high current capability of the PL81. |
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#39 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear, UK.
Posts: 8,018
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Hi Peter, thanks for the Mullard data, it was an interesting read when originally published in WW way back. I always wondered if anyone had the full set
Ed |
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#40 |
Heptode
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Melbourne Australia
Posts: 855
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With respect to the Mullard data and circuit #8, was it common to use such a bias oscillator to generate a negative bias for output stage valves in transformerless equipment? I can see the practical expediency of using a local oscillator coil, and using grid leak biasing of both the triode and for the output stage after filtering (which at 2MHz needs only small caps).
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