Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
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- paologregorio
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Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
Makes it look easy, doesn't he?! http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2008/0 ... _tube.html
Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
Yup, amazing. I'd seen that before, and it might even have been posted here. Something to do with your spare time - make tubes! 
Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
Sure thing! It's a snap. Why I'll just run right out and get the lathe, and all the other machinery I need tomorrow morning.
JimK
JimK
Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
Interesting, but don't those tubes glow a bit too much (due to the presence of gases present because of insufficient vacuum appliedd during manufacture)?
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
It's simply amazing what can be done with a bit of knowledge, planning and a few tools and equipment.
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
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ryan.jones
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Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
But is it not true that the best tube manufacturers cannot get that final bit of vacuum due solely to pumping the gas out of the tube to a near-vacuum, and so after manufacture they burn out a "getter charge" with the first applied voltage? The getter charge is a bit of gas-absorbing material placed in the tube at initial manufacture and before closing the glass envelope, sorta like a charge of explosive , that "burns away" the slight remaining oxygen in a tube, and produces that slight bloom of material on the inside of the tube near the base?doctorwho wrote:Interesting, but don't those tubes glow a bit too much (due to the presence of gases present because of insufficient vacuum appliedd during manufacture)?
Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
It IS an interesting and relaxing vid to watch, Paolo. Wish I had the time.......and the talent to do it. Thanks for sharing, brah. Peace, out.......Goofyfoot
Play on, pick often, jam with any Rickenbacker, and prosper.
Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
The glow could be exaggerated by the video camera. Bright things in video often appear differently than we sense them in reality.doctorwho wrote:Interesting, but don't those tubes glow a bit too much (due to the presence of gases present because of insufficient vacuum appliedd during manufacture)?
All I wanna do is rock!
Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
Yes, it's true. It's almost impossible to achieve a complete vacuum, even outer space has stuff floating around in it. Vacuum tubes work best with a total vacuum, so a few molecules of gas left over cause problems. Since you can't get them out with a vacuum pump, the best way to deal with them is to bind them up or absorb them, this is what the "getter" does. It is a combination of highly reactive metals such as barium, calcium, strontium, etc. that is flash evaporated onto the glass envelope of the tube (it's the silvery looking stuff on the tube, often on the top, sometimes on the side). This metal mixture reacts with and absorbs the few molecules remaining in the tube, effectively removing them.ryan.jones wrote:But is it not true that the best tube manufacturers cannot get that final bit of vacuum due solely to pumping the gas out of the tube to a near-vacuum, and so after manufacture they burn out a "getter charge" with the first applied voltage? The getter charge is a bit of gas-absorbing material placed in the tube at initial manufacture and before closing the glass envelope, sorta like a charge of explosive , that "burns away" the slight remaining oxygen in a tube, and produces that slight bloom of material on the inside of the tube near the base?doctorwho wrote:Interesting, but don't those tubes glow a bit too much (due to the presence of gases present because of insufficient vacuum appliedd during manufacture)?
I have NO idea what to do with those skinny stringed things... I'm just a bass player...
- beatlefreak
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Re: Check out this fellow making his own tubes!
A lotta work involved with that.
