Hoffman Amplifiers Tube Amplifier Forum
Amp Stuff => AmpTools/Tech Tips => Topic started by: eleventeen on August 18, 2010, 11:51:21 am
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I recently acquired a gargeload of about 1000 tubes...most NOS, though only about 10% of which are useful. Even though most of the NOS ones are in boxes, the boxes generally disintegrate just by touching them since they are at least 60 years old!
So I came up with this cheapo idea for a way to hold tubes. With about an 8" length of 1" copper pipe (haven't tested steel conduit but it would probably work the same, would be tougher to sharpen)
With a pipe reamer, I sharpened the inside of one end of the pipe. It cuts utterly perfect sized holes for straightsided octal tubes (5Y3, 6V6, etc;) in styrofoam, and if the inside of the pipe is a tad rough, so much the better. The holes shown were made before I really got the end sharp and left a litle bit of roughness in the styrofoam as shown. Now that I've gotten it nicely sharp. the holes it makes are very clean.
(http://i172.photobucket.com/albums/w32/ttm4/tube_holder003.jpg)
Incidentally, those 6106 tubes = indirectly heated 5Y3 (sort of) shown are quite remarkable. I've never seen tubes take so long to warm up. In a tube tester, after one minute they show no life whatsoever! The filaments take about 2.5 minutes to warm up. Milled ceramic cathodes produce amazingly closely matched diode halves. I'm not sure that matters except to the most fetishy of fetishists, but they FAR outperform brand new 5Y3Ws.
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I use the same Technic to make hole punches, steel tubing comes in fractional sizes.
sharpen the outside and the punched hole is the ID of the tube, sharpen the inside like you do and you have the OD size.
You know now that I'm looking at your pic, one could build a neat tube transporter using foam rubber salvaged from an old sofa and a metal document box from a good will.
Think I gots me a side project this weekend.
Ray
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I use upside down egg cartons with just the very bottom of the egg pocket cut out, but only enough to squeeze the tube in there, pins up. You can stack them that way, too, but only three or four high.
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eleventeen I like your idea
(may be because my previous job was for 24 years at an hydraulics material seller) :wink:
Sure I'll try it :grin:
Kagliostro