Welcome Guest! Be sure you know and follow the Phorum Rules before posting. Thank you and Enjoy! (January 12) x

Thread Closed
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tube tester repair TV-11
#1

who can i get to repair a tube tester? The filament voltages are all over the place.
#2

Filament voltages come from taps on the power transformer, and there's not much you can do to change them. It's not unusual for some of them to be off a little, either high or low, though high is more common. They will drop somewhat under load, so you should be measuring them with a suitable tube plugged in.
#3

I thought about that but most of them are way high or way low. thought about replacing the rheostat . but it seems to work ok maybe a little jumpy...but it has fried two tubes form the voltage being so high
#4

Alan is right. The taps pretty much determine the voltage. The rehostat takes care of the little high/ little low after the load of the tube is brought to bear. Ive never had to fix one but it might be worth you taking a realy good look to make sure there is no "creative wiring" form a previous owner. I would suspect if the transformer was bad there would be a noticable loud hum, unusual heat, smoke, or all of the above. Good luck

Dave

Dave Casazza
Keep em glowin and goin...
#5

Is the switch knob installed correctly on the shaft?
#6

as far as i can tell the knob is fine. There dosent look like anyone has ever been in it before. The voltage are all over the place like the windings are missed up, but the transformer looks fine no funny smells or anything. The transformer has about 10 taps coming off of it.....I am probable going to junk it and try to find another one.
#7

I have a few testers I use and the readings do vary, but not enough to blow a tube. What tubes did it blow? Any chance of a shorting wire or debris on the selector switch?
#8

There must be a pattern to this. Read the voltage on pins 1 and 4 of the 4-pin socket, while turning the filament selector through its range. They'll be somewhat high, with no load, but they should match the knob settings pretty well. Do they start at 1 or 2 volts and increase in step with the knob position? 6V at the 5V position, 7V at the 6V position, 13V at the 12V position, and so on? Or do they really jump around?




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
1949 Motorola 5A9M
Haven't thought of Burgess batteres in a while  https://www.radionostalgia.ca/lib/Images/battery/us/burgess1D.jpgi ...Vlad95 — 03:50 PM
Philco Model 16 wiring question
Measure the voltages first, just in case.morzh — 02:19 PM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
Haven't thought of Burgess batteries in a while Mr. Fixer. Boston Edison always used Burgess in their Bright Star yellow...Paul Philco322 — 02:17 PM
1949 Motorola 5A9M
Thanks Sam. I'll let you know. I can probably scare some up from the local radio club.klondike98 — 02:07 PM
Philco 89 Code 123 Osc Coil
Hello,  I thought I would post my findings on my bad oscillator tickler coil. There were 27 turns on the outer coil b...dconant — 12:38 PM
Philco Model 16 wiring question
Thanks Morzh. So it appears I did wire it incorrectly and I have to switch the wires between pins 2 and 4.bobclausen — 09:24 AM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
No, it's not a problem, just during certain condition it could show up. Yes, an internal tube short could do that too. ...morzh — 09:13 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
You sound guys are never satisfied. :crazy: :clap:RodB — 09:10 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
I got some new ceramic octal tube sockets installed and also tried some different coupling caps.  The results:  The go...TV MAN — 08:42 AM
Philco 46-1209 strange behavior
I pulled the tube out and it's shorted from pin 1 to pin 2. I suppose that's the problem...sq65 — 08:12 AM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently no members online.

>