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Old January 4th 10, 04:20 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors
Kenneth Scharf Kenneth Scharf is offline
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Default Geiger Tube Anyone?

Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
Kenneth Scharf wrote:

Once upon a time I recall the type CK1026 GM tube. This was about the
size of a 50C5 tube, but with a single pin and an aquadag coating on the
outside of the tube. This tube was used in a geiger counter project
that was in one of Alfred Morgan's 'boys books of radio and
electronics', either the 2nd or 3rd book. There were other types of GM
tubes made, but the CK1026 was one of the least expensive and was used
in many simple radiation detectors.


The ones used in the 1960's radiation detectors and then sold in a pack
of 3 for $1 at Radio Shack in the late 1960's looked like long neon bulbs
with an extra wire comming out of them. I think they were around two inches
long, but it's been a long time since I've seen them.

Considering that they were designed to detect levels of radiation that would
only exist if you were close to ground zero and poking your head out of
a shelter in the rubble of an east coast (US) city, for all I know they
really were neon bulbs. :-)

Geoff.

You probably could use a Neon bulb as a radiation detector. You'd have
to keep the tube in the dark (inside a black plastic box) and carefully
adjust the voltage across the tube so it was just below the firing
voltage (need a well regulated power supply). Then an alpha or beta
particle might be enough to trigger the tube into conduction. The
sensitivity would be determined how close to the firing voltage the bias
supply was set.