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#31
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Dave wrote:
Many thanks to all who replied, both here and by email. They sound like a great tube for LOTS of purposes. My favorite suggestion was building a regen, using each half in place of the 6AQ5's called for in the ARRL handbook design from the 50's! How about an oscillator / amplifier for HF, running low plate voltage for a relatively low RF output? Seems they should be able to do that - and having a separate oscillator stage it wouldn't be prone to runaway and exessive crystal current. And it would look VERY cool! If I recall, the 829 is one of the tubes with the cathodes tied together to a single pin, isn't it? This reduces the utility for such things. What sort of plate caps were used? There are just pins, and it looks almost as if there would have been a ceramic gizmo like a tube socket to have bridged the two of them.... They are little ceramic clips. You can use Molex pins in a pinch. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#32
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That's right on! The rig was the Collins ARC-1. It used one in the final and one
in the modulator. The thing was for 100-156 MHz. Later conversions for the airlines in the late 40's added 50 or so channels (sort of like the ARC-3 and the ARC-49). snip- I was looking at doing something like that years ago, using a homebrew output transformer, but I never finished it. I do know that the 829 was used in some of the modulation decks for aircraft band transmitters at one point, so they should be fun at AF. --scott |
#33
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That's right on! The rig was the Collins ARC-1. It used one in the final and one
in the modulator. The thing was for 100-156 MHz. Later conversions for the airlines in the late 40's added 50 or so channels (sort of like the ARC-3 and the ARC-49). snip- I was looking at doing something like that years ago, using a homebrew output transformer, but I never finished it. I do know that the 829 was used in some of the modulation decks for aircraft band transmitters at one point, so they should be fun at AF. --scott |
#34
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Dave, as I recall there was a design in one of the ARRL books..... maybe VHF
manual that included an 829B. I also recall Motorola using this in a very old radio, don't remember exactly. Anyway I think it's good for 40-50 watts. I wouldn't mind having them if your looking to part with them. Clay "Dave" wrote in message news.com... Hi all, I just found several 829B tubes - believe it or not in my garage - I must have got them in a box of stuff at a ham fest at one time. A check on Ebay shows they're pretty much worthless for the sake of dollars, but they're so COOL! With the two plate caps that are actually just stiff pins, they look like little Martians. I put a pair on my office credenza just to look geeky cool. Fresh out of the box as NOS they look amazing - just like they were made yesterday. It's a pity they have no value - maybe as a homebrew project?? So can someone tell me what they would have been used for? Something tells me they're a VHF power tube. Any application as a one-tube QRP rig of any sort? Any stories about using them in the past? I've built a lot of little rigs over the years, but never knew about the 829 Thanks, Dave |
#35
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Dave, as I recall there was a design in one of the ARRL books..... maybe VHF
manual that included an 829B. I also recall Motorola using this in a very old radio, don't remember exactly. Anyway I think it's good for 40-50 watts. I wouldn't mind having them if your looking to part with them. Clay "Dave" wrote in message news.com... Hi all, I just found several 829B tubes - believe it or not in my garage - I must have got them in a box of stuff at a ham fest at one time. A check on Ebay shows they're pretty much worthless for the sake of dollars, but they're so COOL! With the two plate caps that are actually just stiff pins, they look like little Martians. I put a pair on my office credenza just to look geeky cool. Fresh out of the box as NOS they look amazing - just like they were made yesterday. It's a pity they have no value - maybe as a homebrew project?? So can someone tell me what they would have been used for? Something tells me they're a VHF power tube. Any application as a one-tube QRP rig of any sort? Any stories about using them in the past? I've built a lot of little rigs over the years, but never knew about the 829 Thanks, Dave |
#36
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I just found several 829B tubes - believe it or not in my garage - I
snip So can someone tell me what they would have been used for? Something tells me they're a VHF power tube. Any application as a one-tube QRP rig of any sort? Any stories about using them in the past? I've built a lot of little rigs over the years, but never knew about the 829 The datasheet is he http://www.mif.pg.gda.pl/homepages/f...049/8/829B.pdf A lot of The Radio Amateur's Handbooks of the '50s and '60s had 892B projects in them. The 1953 edition, immediately to my left as I write this, has "A 100-Watt RF Amplifier for 50 and 144 Mc." on page 405. It runs push-pull class-C, up to 120 Watts CW or FM, and 100 Watts AM. And the following fellow has gone to an awful lot of trouble to use two 829Bs in parallel single-ended triode mode in a stereo amplifier: http://www.pmillett.addr.com/829b_amplifier.htm |
#37
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I just found several 829B tubes - believe it or not in my garage - I
snip So can someone tell me what they would have been used for? Something tells me they're a VHF power tube. Any application as a one-tube QRP rig of any sort? Any stories about using them in the past? I've built a lot of little rigs over the years, but never knew about the 829 The datasheet is he http://www.mif.pg.gda.pl/homepages/f...049/8/829B.pdf A lot of The Radio Amateur's Handbooks of the '50s and '60s had 892B projects in them. The 1953 edition, immediately to my left as I write this, has "A 100-Watt RF Amplifier for 50 and 144 Mc." on page 405. It runs push-pull class-C, up to 120 Watts CW or FM, and 100 Watts AM. And the following fellow has gone to an awful lot of trouble to use two 829Bs in parallel single-ended triode mode in a stereo amplifier: http://www.pmillett.addr.com/829b_amplifier.htm |
#38
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In article fmCUb.12231$gl2.8324@lakeread05, " Uncle Peter"
writes: "Dave" wrote in message tnews.com... Hi all, I just found several 829B tubes - believe it or not in my garage - I must have got them in a box of stuff at a ham fest at one time. A check on Ebay shows they're pretty much worthless for the sake of dollars, but they're so COOL! With the two plate caps that are actually just stiff pins, they look like little Martians. They are WWII military tubes. As you surmised, mostly for VHF work. The smaller cousin was the 832B tube, used in the SCR-522 transmitter (driver, PA stages). A very popular conversion for 2-meter AM through the 50s and early 60s. The modern version of the 829 is the 5894 power tube. The 829 was the final amplifier in the AN/TRC-1 and AN/TRC-4 VHF radio relay transmitter that was first fielded in Europe in 1943. 70 to 90 MHz, crystal controlled, phase modulation at a low frequency, multiplied many times. Probably designed about 1941 but no data on that. Dual pentode with common cathode, plates brought out to heavy pins on the envelope top. Pushed and operating at maximums, it can put out about 75 W at 6 Meters. TRC-1 and TRC-8 (high VHF) radio relay equipment was on 24/7 "hot spares" service for landline coupling backup at Army station ADA in Tokyo up to 1954. Had literal hands-on with those. :-) Those TRC-1 transmitters ran for hours and hours and hours without fail, 40 to 50 Watts RF output. A small tale on Lubriplate from Hank Kolesnik's mention in another thread: The old radio relay equipment had separate receiver and and transmitter cases and the TRC-1s had brushless shaded-pole fan motors in the lids. While very cheap, those shaded-pole motors are quite reliable. They have a (felt?) lubricant pad for sleeve bearings; no appreciable load to require ball bearings nor high speed. A well-intentioned newbie on one shift decided to "improve motor performance" with Lubriplate (then a very new product in 1954) and loaded the lubricant pads with it. While Lubriplate is a very good product, it is a SLOW-SPEED thing. The shaded-pole fan motors would seize up eventually, their normal light oil lubricant displaced by the Lubriplate. For about three months it was SOP for all shifts to have the "VHF man" check all the fans. Any fan with low or no flow meant a bothersome job of removing the fan, replacing it with a spare, then soaking the lubricant pad for several hours in solvent, saturating it afterwards in the proper light oil, checking it out, keeping it as a spare for the next stopped fan. Really put a kink in my magazine reading on the night shifts...:-) Lubriplate is a fine lubricant for dial drives and shaft bearings but should NOT be used in motor bearings. Other than one incident with a blown fuse in one transmitter, the dozen-plus AN/TRC-1s and TRC-8s ran and ran and ran reliably. Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
#39
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In article fmCUb.12231$gl2.8324@lakeread05, " Uncle Peter"
writes: "Dave" wrote in message tnews.com... Hi all, I just found several 829B tubes - believe it or not in my garage - I must have got them in a box of stuff at a ham fest at one time. A check on Ebay shows they're pretty much worthless for the sake of dollars, but they're so COOL! With the two plate caps that are actually just stiff pins, they look like little Martians. They are WWII military tubes. As you surmised, mostly for VHF work. The smaller cousin was the 832B tube, used in the SCR-522 transmitter (driver, PA stages). A very popular conversion for 2-meter AM through the 50s and early 60s. The modern version of the 829 is the 5894 power tube. The 829 was the final amplifier in the AN/TRC-1 and AN/TRC-4 VHF radio relay transmitter that was first fielded in Europe in 1943. 70 to 90 MHz, crystal controlled, phase modulation at a low frequency, multiplied many times. Probably designed about 1941 but no data on that. Dual pentode with common cathode, plates brought out to heavy pins on the envelope top. Pushed and operating at maximums, it can put out about 75 W at 6 Meters. TRC-1 and TRC-8 (high VHF) radio relay equipment was on 24/7 "hot spares" service for landline coupling backup at Army station ADA in Tokyo up to 1954. Had literal hands-on with those. :-) Those TRC-1 transmitters ran for hours and hours and hours without fail, 40 to 50 Watts RF output. A small tale on Lubriplate from Hank Kolesnik's mention in another thread: The old radio relay equipment had separate receiver and and transmitter cases and the TRC-1s had brushless shaded-pole fan motors in the lids. While very cheap, those shaded-pole motors are quite reliable. They have a (felt?) lubricant pad for sleeve bearings; no appreciable load to require ball bearings nor high speed. A well-intentioned newbie on one shift decided to "improve motor performance" with Lubriplate (then a very new product in 1954) and loaded the lubricant pads with it. While Lubriplate is a very good product, it is a SLOW-SPEED thing. The shaded-pole fan motors would seize up eventually, their normal light oil lubricant displaced by the Lubriplate. For about three months it was SOP for all shifts to have the "VHF man" check all the fans. Any fan with low or no flow meant a bothersome job of removing the fan, replacing it with a spare, then soaking the lubricant pad for several hours in solvent, saturating it afterwards in the proper light oil, checking it out, keeping it as a spare for the next stopped fan. Really put a kink in my magazine reading on the night shifts...:-) Lubriplate is a fine lubricant for dial drives and shaft bearings but should NOT be used in motor bearings. Other than one incident with a blown fuse in one transmitter, the dozen-plus AN/TRC-1s and TRC-8s ran and ran and ran reliably. Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
#40
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![]() "Dave" wrote in message news.com... Many thanks to all who replied, both here and by email. They sound like a great tube for LOTS of purposes. My favorite suggestion was building a regen, using each half in place of the 6AQ5's called for in the ARRL handbook design from the 50's! How about an oscillator / amplifier for HF, running low plate voltage for a relatively low RF output? Seems they should be able to do that - and having a separate oscillator stage it wouldn't be prone to runaway and exessive crystal current. And it would look VERY cool! I'd think running the 829 in parallel for a HF PA, with another 829 as a P-P modulator would be a neat project. Pete |
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