A Look at Mercury and Xenon Rectifiers

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
  • Today we’re doing something a little different - we’re taking a look at some unique tubes I have in the collection. Notably, we’ll be looking at a Mercury Vapor Rectifier as well as a Xenon Gas Rectifier. These both operate in nearly the same way, but they both have very different visual results. In this short episode we take a look at just how a gas rectifier works, then power them to see the glow and even take a look on the scope at them doing some rectification!
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    Intro Music adapted from:
    Artist: The Runaway Five
    Title: The Shinra Shuffle
    ocremix.org/remix/OCR01847
    Thanks for watching!
    Chapters
    0:00 Introduction
    2:13 What is a rectifier?
    4:10 What is a mercury vapor rectifier?
    5:53 Let’s put some power into these things
    10:26 Can we see the rectification?
    13:00 Outro
    13:45 Bunny!
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 357

  • @jnucci1
    @jnucci1 Před rokem +3

    Back in the mid-80's, I helped an older electronics guru and ham radio operator build a high voltage (3kV) power supply from surplus parts that included a pair of mercury vapor rectifiers. He wouldn't let anyone walk behind the supply while it was operating. It had an open back and his concerns were the UV light and his fear the whole thing would just explode due to the unknown provenance and condition of the parts. Luckily, nothing ever blew up or caught fire, and nobody got electrocuted. The fellow was nearly blind, and he blamed it on his constant playing with those rectifiers since his childhood.

  • @99icd
    @99icd Před rokem +114

    When I used to operate carbon arc film projectors, they were powered by rather large mercury rectifier tubes (many times the size of the two in the video). We were told to keep the rectifier cabinet door closed when they were operating because of the UV light emitted by them.

    • @trevorvanbremen4718
      @trevorvanbremen4718 Před rokem +35

      How many volts were they rectifying for the arc lamps? (If it was over about 15kV, then you'd ALSO get a bit of X-Ray radiation to add to you UV).
      The glass envelope itself probably blocked a majority of the UV from escaping (but some WILL get out though)
      Here in NZ, we _USED_ to use MARs (Mercury Arc Rectifiers) for the HVDC submarine link between the two main islands. Unfortunately, they've now been fully converted to Thyristors.
      You can see a pic or the MARs bank halfway down the page at:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HVDC_Inter-Island
      Just imagine getting too close to THOSE puppies when they were active!!! LOL
      My understanding is that the inter-island HVDC link currently employs two independent 'poles' each operating at 350kV DC at up to 2000A
      (That should get that slice of toast ready nice and quickly!)

    • @mohinderkaur6671
      @mohinderkaur6671 Před rokem +2

      Rectron rectifiers? Found another video of these used with a cinema arc projector.

    • @cobrag0318
      @cobrag0318 Před rokem +5

      Ran xenon short arc lamps on our 35mms, and you still don't take those power supplies lightly. I can only imagine carbon arc with these tube rectifiers. Always wanted to try my hand at the carbon arc projectors but sadly it's a dying art.

    • @pileofstuff
      @pileofstuff Před rokem +6

      Greetings fellow (former) projectionist

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +7

      Man, that's awesome! When things get to the high power level, there's some seriously impressive tube equipment out there!
      As Trevor said the majority of the UV should be blocked by the glass enclosure (especially so on this comparatively tiny little rectifier).

  • @jeffsutherland1602
    @jeffsutherland1602 Před 5 dny

    50 years ago as a kid in high school I worked at the local radio station. We had a 10KW FM transmitter, old RCA thing, that used 6 mercury vapor rectifier tubes for the B+. In the winter time we always left the filaments on even when it was off the air as the transmitter shack up on the mountain was unheated. Mercury would condense on the cathodes and the plates in cold weather. Every once in a while the goofball who worked the last shift on Saturday night, in a hurry to leave, would kill all the power. The Sunday morning person couldn't get the station on the air and I would get a phone call early before church. Headed to the station to get the jeep for the trip up the mountain and afraid of what I was going to see. Yep, instant superfund site, all the rectifier tubes had exploded. I don't miss working with these.

  • @skeggjoldgunnr3167
    @skeggjoldgunnr3167 Před rokem +5

    I've worked as an industrial electrician, motion controls, 3ph 480, some light rail DC substation rebuilds, some electric arc furnace work at steel foundries, etc. NEVER saw a mercury rectifier until I played Sniper Elite 4. They mesmerized me! I googled them. A video here on CZcams appeared. Photonicinduction was the channel. Well THAT took a turn! So cool to see here a smaller version! Thanks for this!

    • @robertschemonia5617
      @robertschemonia5617 Před 7 měsíci

      SE4 is a GREAT game. I remember exactly what mission you're talking about, too. First time o ever saw one was in a video on YT, it was in a battery charger, and to start it you turned a knob on the front that tilts the whole tube to strike the arc in it. It was super cool.

  • @garyjohnson4608
    @garyjohnson4608 Před rokem +6

    These old tubes are a strong reflection of the creative genius that created these devices !!

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem

      I often struggle to wrap my head around these things, but those mad lads invented the things!

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA Před rokem +33

    Note the steep rise at the beginning, where the voltage is not enough on each sine wave to turn the tube on, but it jumps to a higher voltage as soon as there is enough voltage.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +7

      Yup! Takes about 15V to 20V before the ionization occurs and it begins conducting properly.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Před rokem +3

      @@UsagiElectric Interesting property, I wonder if that was ever exploited in the same way SCR and TRIAC is for "dimming" in whatever context it might have been used in
      Edit: as it seems to be related to filament temp as well

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem

      there is a small reverse current that is not seen in the scope. the reverse current will be approx in the ratio of electron mass vs Hg ion mass. The contribution of Hg ion to the total current is rather small (also space charge)

  • @nsummy
    @nsummy Před 2 měsíci

    Great video. Despite dabbling in electronics for the past few years some of the terms and concepts still get confusing. Even though you are using an old tube as an example this is one of the best explanations for a rectifier that I have seen

  • @TheGunnarRoxen
    @TheGunnarRoxen Před rokem +10

    Those are very cool colours! Lovely blue and purple. Amazing that the colour is a total side effect of the rectifiers doing their actual job.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem

      Right! They're just gorgeous little tubes when lit up, and while the original designers probably viewed it as an unwanted side effect, to me, it's the primary reason to use them.

  • @TNE_YT
    @TNE_YT Před rokem +4

    Ever since I first saw Mercury Arc Rectifiers on PhotonicInduction's channel I have always been fascinated with these components and their construction! Can't wait to watch this too👍

  • @mountain177
    @mountain177 Před rokem

    Theres a real neat video of some folks restoring a teletype machine, i think its either from the 20s or 30s. But the power sypply for this with all of its original caps, still worked and produced super clean DC output.

  • @Bobo-ox7fj
    @Bobo-ox7fj Před 4 měsíci

    Oddly enough the colour of the first is very reminiscent of a mercury vapour arc lamp. (especially after it warms up) Very pretty!

  • @dell177
    @dell177 Před rokem

    I was on an army mountaintop radio site in 1969. We had about a dozen tube based (TRC-24 and TRC 29) microwave sets up there and these had mercury rectifiers in the base of the racks to supply the DC voltage to the system. We were on top of a 3500 ft peak so we did not have a lot of bugs up there but in the spring we had an invasoin of Miller moths that went ape over any UV light source like the mercury vapor security lights around the site. You could see clouds of them around these lights, we were careful to use only dim bulbs above the entry doos to the Quonset huts to not draw any moths to the buildings and that pretty much kept them at bay,
    However the moths could see that loverly UV glow in the base of our transmitter racks through the windows and they wanted inside NOW. A few would always find a way in and go after the florescent lights and those glowing rectifier tubes. Nothing like a big juicy moth colliding with a very hot tube to ruin your night. They would dive bomb the rectifiers and as soon as the hit that hot glowing glass they would be cooked and could crack the glass envelope of the tube and take a set down till we could get a new tube in there. We ended up lining the metal grills that covered the ventilation holes with copper screening to keep the buggers out.

  • @andymouse
    @andymouse Před rokem +1

    Always fun to do !...cheers.

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics Před rokem +21

    This reminds me of the teletype power supply CuriousMarc was working on :)
    Lovely glow! Thing of beauty, joy for ever, and you've got lots of the other Dave's enthusiasm. And niiiiiiice Tektronix transformer there.
    Just don't let the usagi-chan tip the tube off and break it, please...
    I'll have to do some experiments with thyratrons - got two of them somewhere in my lab.

    • @SergiuszRoszczyk
      @SergiuszRoszczyk Před rokem +1

      I was about to write the same ;)

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +2

      Oh yeah, Marc's TTY power supply was an absolute gorgeous piece of equipment!
      And the little usagi quickly discovered the tube wasn't going to supply any treats and lost interest, haha.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Před rokem

      I have some 2D21 thyratrons here somewhere, as well as some miniature pencil size thyratrons that were used in televisions. I used to have some larger ones that were used for elevator switching I think but I don't know where those have gotten to.....

    • @user-ci3gu1xj5n
      @user-ci3gu1xj5n Před 8 měsíci

      Love valves, thanks for this. Still got my Tektronix 2215 60Meg scope. A reliable companion for many years.

  • @grahamheath3799
    @grahamheath3799 Před rokem +8

    it reminded me of some college work I did many years ago we were experimenting with DC machines. The DC rectifier was a mercury vapour tube about 3 foot tall! That was cool. Although that term hadn't been invented. remember the mercury tube does throw off UV light.

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem

      tall tubes were high voltage but relatively low current rectifiers. 3ft rectifiers were common for x-ray tubes etc

  • @InssiAjaton
    @InssiAjaton Před rokem +13

    Once upon a time, way way back when, I observed a thyratron in operation. It was part of a DC motor control circuit. It was a phase control circuit, just a bit before semiconductor thyristors or SCRs took over the phase control applications. I mean, there were already small SCRs available, but engineers did not yet know how to really use them. So thyratrons were used as old "familiar and sure working" components. The maximum current was quite limited, but sufficient to drive saturable core amplifiers or "mag-amps". If you find some thyratrons, I believe that would be a nice addition. By the way, a really high current mercury rectifier was called Ignitron and was used in electrochemical applications like galvanic plating. I have never seen one, only read about them in an old book. Another 'by-the-way' item I have used was a short arc lamp in a multi channel oscillograph. The tiny and very bright light could be steered with tiny swinging mirrors onto photo sensitive paper to produce a permanent recording of something before the digital storage oscilloscopes or where Polaroid scope cameras offered too short a snapshot.

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem

      mercury arc rectifiers were used when we needed currents of 1000 or 10000A for example for use in electrolysis for metal production (Al, Mg, Na, K etc etc)

    • @bryanlatimer-davies1222
      @bryanlatimer-davies1222 Před rokem

      Also used to rectify current for railway trains, I think one is in use in one of the UK islands.

  • @jj74qformerlyjailbreak3

    After second consideration I will start working with tubes. Nostalgia level off the charts here.

  • @brianclimbs1509
    @brianclimbs1509 Před rokem

    I'm going to nitpick a little here at the use of the phrase "boil off" to describe the emission of electrons from the cathode. I would call it charged particle emission, since it requires a strong electric field at the surface to pull the electrons out.
    Also, the "shield" around the cathode is known as a "Wehnelt cylinder". It helps to keep the electric field lines parallel in order to emit an electron beam that doesn't spread out too much and therefore allows the tube to sustain higher currents by counteracting the repulsive force that the electrons exert on one another.
    As always, thank you for another fantastic video.

  • @hongo3870
    @hongo3870 Před 4 měsíci

    Old vaccuum tubes are so cool to me, i love them.

  • @oldmech619
    @oldmech619 Před rokem

    I remember seeing these old power tubes laying around back in the ‘60s. They were no longer needed. Sad. Thanks for bringing them back to life.

  • @VK2GPU
    @VK2GPU Před rokem +2

    Beautiful LEDs :D

  • @russellhltn1396
    @russellhltn1396 Před rokem +20

    Just a reminder, 113VAC (RMS) would be close to 160V peak.

    • @petrjiricek8039
      @petrjiricek8039 Před rokem +3

      Just a reminder, this type of rectifier have average voltage drop around 15V

    • @thargoid666
      @thargoid666 Před rokem

      @@petrjiricek8039 A shottky mercury vapor rectifier should perform better

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +1

      You're absolutely right! But these rectifiers do have a 15V drop across them according to the datasheets, so I would be expecting about 140V to 145V peak on the scope, but in reality, it looked a little closer to 130V to 140V. Could just be my poor reading of the scope though, I really should have dropped the V/cm setting and put 0V at the bottom of the grid and then use the full grid to count the real amplitude.

    • @russellhltn1396
      @russellhltn1396 Před rokem

      @@UsagiElectric That's assuming the scopes are calibrated. ;)

  • @andrewwaud3407
    @andrewwaud3407 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for the glowing rectifier demo! Love that violet plasma!! If you have a "magic eye" tube in your collection, that could be a good video idea for the near future 👁️‍🗨️

  • @rajanne2947
    @rajanne2947 Před 28 dny

    I still have an old 60s Telerad Vacuum tube radio somewhere that my Dad bought with his first salary!

  • @silverXnoise
    @silverXnoise Před rokem +6

    Either your camera or your post-production did a good job filtering out the UV emissions that frequently cause MV rectifiers to appear purple on camera. Such a beautiful, ethereal glow.

  • @metactaft5850
    @metactaft5850 Před rokem +5

    A good youtuber

  • @donaldhoot7741
    @donaldhoot7741 Před rokem +2

    I love the old VT127A and the 327A. They both have the uranium glass pin pass throughs! Great video.

  • @sn1000k
    @sn1000k Před rokem +1

    I love the gleeful personality of you and your channel. I didn't understand it at first but I dig it. I'd love to see some of the biggest tubes in your collection with power applied. I've seen many big ones, but never in an active state.

  • @GodmanchesterGoblin
    @GodmanchesterGoblin Před rokem +3

    Loved this - and the heatsink for the dropper resistor for the filament supply made my day!
    It's perhaps worth noting that Xenon tubes to not have a "right way up" whereas Mercury Vapour tubes must be mounted vertically (as yours) so that any mercury condensate collects away from the anode when the tube is not in use.

  • @TastyBusiness
    @TastyBusiness Před rokem +4

    Beautiful. I didn't know mercury vapor rectifiers came in such a small package.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +1

      The much larger mercury tubes are actually a little different. Those are Mercury Arc Rectifiers, and interestingly, they don't have a filament, making them a cold cathode tube. But the cathode is actually the pool of mercury in the bottom. They're amazing pieces of engineering and I'd love to get my hands on one someday!

    • @tippyc2
      @tippyc2 Před rokem

      @@UsagiElectric i was gonna ask if it was the same principle with the big mercury rectifiers. Question answered.

  • @RinoaL
    @RinoaL Před rokem +3

    I'm delighted to see this subject on your channel.
    I remember one time searching online about Tungar rectifiers because I wanted to get myself one... and I found my video I'd made about my own 1910s Tungar charger which I had forgotten I had recorded and also forgotten I even owned. The curse of having too many videos over too many years. hahaha

  • @peregrineclarke
    @peregrineclarke Před rokem +2

    I love these tubes. I’m always amazed at the huge mercury arc rectifiers used in the old power stations and the ones in the old underground railway stations for the lifts etc. amazing stuff 👍

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +1

      Thank you!
      Interestingly, the big Mercury Arc Rectifiers are actually a little different. They're technically a cold cathode tube that uses a pool of mercury in the bottom of the tube as the cathode. They're brilliantly designed tubes, and if I can ever get my hands on one, I'd love to do a deep dive on them!

    • @wireless6
      @wireless6 Před rokem

      We used to use mercury arc rectifiers in telephone exchanges to keep the 50 volts batteries charged.

  • @alexfaught8717
    @alexfaught8717 Před rokem +2

    Don't know if your familiar with the channel: photonicinduction but he has a huge mercury arc rectifier that's fun to watch.

  • @RadioTeal
    @RadioTeal Před rokem

    Beinga Ham radio guy, I used to have a surplus army shortwave radio from an airplane where the dynamotor was removed and the guy that gave me the setup had built a power supply to replace the old aircraft setup so it could get the proper voltages from AC mains. That power supply had a rectifier tube on it, but it was not a cool Xeonon or Mercury vapor tube. Was still cool. If memory servers, the radio needed 15 VDC and another weird voltage to operate. It was modified to pick up Amaturer frequencies as well as shortwave. Loved the video and it has been about 40 years since I had seen a tube recifier 🙂

  • @agranero6
    @agranero6 Před rokem +3

    In the 70s there was a rectifier station on my neighborhood. The sign said it was mercury rectifier station for the electric buses (in Brazil they were like trams with a pantograph at the top to the electric line but without tracks). My father worked with mercury rectifiers on radio transmitters: they were HUGE, usually the heating cycle was manual, controlled by push buttons to heat and activate.

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem

      if you do not have the tracks as the return path, you will need two pantographs and two wires on the top...

    • @shana_dmr
      @shana_dmr Před rokem

      @@janami-dharmam Yeah, two "sticks" www.lubus.info/images/stories/technika/siec/3839-153-2011-3.jpg

  • @notquitecopacetic
    @notquitecopacetic Před rokem

    Both cool, but aesthetically it is xenon for the win. Good show!

  • @AdamosDad
    @AdamosDad Před rokem

    55 years ago, I was an electronics tech in the USN. I worked on a transmitter the AN/WRT2 there were 4 large rectifier tubes in the amplifier power supply, they glowed a beautiful purplish blue, while rectifying 2kv.

  • @adrianschneider4441
    @adrianschneider4441 Před rokem +2

    Looking forward to more videos on particular or unusual tubes.

  • @stefanegger
    @stefanegger Před rokem

    You got it all, you legend. Almost as legendary as Jan Beta. The marvels of nature and technology - tubes and bunnies what more can humanity ask for?

  • @kingey71
    @kingey71 Před rokem

    We use/used six phase (3 phase centre tapped transformer input) mercury arc rectifiers - yep, they had six anodes - to supply high current (over 400A) 1500VDC for the suburban electric trains here in Melbourne Australia. I think they are all gone now with old substations being retrofitted with newer technology and with a lot of the redevelopment going on now the new substations definitely don't. I still work in the Metro railway network but not in traction division, but yes in my younger years have seen one working. Looks really cool with a train accelerating!!

  • @luizmarxsenjr
    @luizmarxsenjr Před rokem

    Beautiful, remember my RCA 8008 tube...

  • @StefanWolfrum
    @StefanWolfrum Před rokem +1

    Absolutely fascinating! Plasma!! Wow, so cool!! 🤩

  • @melkiorwiseman5234
    @melkiorwiseman5234 Před rokem

    I can remember doing some (usually "jury rig") repairs on old B&W valve TVs, and the tube I remember giving almost all the trouble was the 6GV8. Any time you got "frame collapse" or a lack of Vertical Hold, you could practically bank on the 6GV8 being either faulty or not connected properly (often because of a bad solder joint).

    • @melkiorwiseman5234
      @melkiorwiseman5234 Před rokem

      That mercury vapour tube has the whitest of white glows just before it changes to pale blue. It reminds me of a dream I can still remember from when I was a child. I never expected to actually see such a pure white in real life. I'd thought it only existed in my dream.
      Bunny: Where's more food? More food, I say! This isn't edible! I'm out'a here!

  • @TheMaxipa
    @TheMaxipa Před rokem

    that was a trip down memory lane. very nostalgic.thank you

  • @Starchface
    @Starchface Před rokem +2

    Enjoyed this look at rectifier tubes. I never know what to expect from your channel but it's always interesting!

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +1

      Thank you!
      I've been going so hard on the Centurion lately, I needed a little change of pace. :)

  • @ehlee5
    @ehlee5 Před rokem

    this is great, glad to have discovered your channel! Great explanation at the beginning.

  • @TunnelOOVision
    @TunnelOOVision Před rokem

    I ordered 872a MAR tube on ebay just because I saw this video (those things aren't cheap)! Hoping to build a circuit around it to fire it up! Love this!

  • @biketech60
    @biketech60 Před rokem

    Stellar demonstration ! Mr. Wizard would have been proud of this .

  • @frankowalker4662
    @frankowalker4662 Před rokem +4

    Great photography.
    You could use both of them to make a very pretty full wave rectifier. :)

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +2

      Thank you!
      I actually did think about this, but I didn't have enough alligator clips, haha.

    • @frankowalker4662
      @frankowalker4662 Před rokem

      @@UsagiElectric LOL.

  • @stumpydog87
    @stumpydog87 Před rokem +1

    As an autistic person I find radio tubes just so fascinating.

  • @silmarian
    @silmarian Před rokem

    The glow of the mercury vapor brought to mind gym class in the 80s and 90s. Those lights would take forever to warm up and had an odd light spectrum.

  • @mymessylab
    @mymessylab Před rokem +5

    I have 3B22s xenon filled on my Colins R-278, yes they produce beautiful colors as well. I think that magic eyes are also very cool and very different in technology from the very beginning to the latest models. It might be a good topic for a future video.

    • @michaelshultz2540
      @michaelshultz2540 Před rokem

      I have several itams with magic eyes in them one a zenith radio an also a old stereo reel to reel deck that records stereo only in one direction as it uses the whole 1/4" tape half for each channel. It has two magic eyes both of those the zenith tombstone radio anfd the tape deck work well. I have not recaped them so it a miracle they are working so good. I dont turn them on much because i do plad on recapping them before they have a problem.

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect Před rokem

    I liked these when Curious Marc was working on the TTY... Thanks for the deeper dive.... a nice eerie glow is what I think we all look for in vacuum tubes.... I had an old tape recorder when I was a kid and the tube VU meter was mesmerising.

  • @michaeldicarlo5540
    @michaeldicarlo5540 Před rokem

    I remember being little and my friends dad used to have equipment that used these , it looked amazing in the dark . Very informative I always wondered how these worked. Thank you very much

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před rokem

      in a dark room, many things will show fluorescence because of the lot of UV produced - but they are bad for the eyes.

  • @dragonheadthing
    @dragonheadthing Před rokem

    A very lovely glow!

  • @W1RMD
    @W1RMD Před rokem

    Great video! Excellent camera work!

  • @timothyp8947
    @timothyp8947 Před rokem

    They look amazing.

  • @mikefochtman7164
    @mikefochtman7164 Před rokem

    Very cool! My grandfather had a battery charger for old cars that had a mercury rectifier. A couple of taps on a transformer, the rectifier and a big old rheostat. Used it in his car repair business back in the days of early cars. Could always tell when it was on by the glow from the tube. :)

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 Před rokem

    Hickok tube testers use a #83 full-wave mercury-vapor rectifier (with old-type 4-pin base) because of it's fixed voltage drop at a wide range of current. There was also a short-lived tweed Fender Bassman circuit that used the #83; I've seen the schematic for it but not the actual amp, although I worked on a "transitional" Bassman that had many of the same component value and circuit characteristics as the #83 version, just not the 4-pin socket for the mercury rectifier (it had a factory-stock octal socket for a 5U4).
    Some folks replace the #83 in a Hickok with solid-state diodes (and perhaps some dropping resistors), but I don't recommend it ---- the calibration and "accuracy" of a Hickok was designed around the #83, and a solid-state rectifier will tend to make marginal tubes read as " good". Note that the Hickok units orient the tube sideways despite the tube manuals saying to use it in vertical orientation only; it is best to allow the tester to warm up for at least 15-20 minutes before testing tubes, to allow the mercury in the #83 to vaporize before pulling B+ current through it (to prevent the #83 from arcing, though this isn't common in a Hickok where the B+ is only 150 volts anyway; that tube will last many years in this application). By the way, an 83-v isn't the same; it's a vacuum rectifier, not a mercury vapor tube.

  • @jgarner420
    @jgarner420 Před rokem +2

    Tubes are so cool

    • @metactaft5850
      @metactaft5850 Před rokem +1

      Agree, I wish I could have access to this sort of tech

  • @arilschultzen3017
    @arilschultzen3017 Před rokem

    Tremendous video, keep it up champ!!

  • @tomcook5813
    @tomcook5813 Před rokem

    I own an Ignatron tube, it’s huge ! Cool vid!

  • @akkudakkupl
    @akkudakkupl Před rokem

    Tasty, tasty UV from that mercury rectifier XD

  • @TeslaTales59
    @TeslaTales59 Před rokem

    "It's gonna get hot!" now this is a great vid. Mr. C's lab would like it too

  • @Alexis_du_60
    @Alexis_du_60 Před rokem +5

    8:33 - reminds me in a way of the getter on some 30's radio tubes I've seen, they all had this whole reflective layer (I'm guessing it's the getter?) covering the entire top of the bulb with the layer gradually fading over towards the bottom of the tube.

    • @hugh007
      @hugh007 Před rokem +3

      You're right. The getter flash after the tube is evacuated.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem +2

      I was thinking the same thing! I just didn't mention it in the video because I guarantee I would ended up confusing myself and saying the wrong words at the wrong times, haha.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 Před rokem

      You are probably thinking of 01 or 01A directly heated, battery-radio triodes with 4 pin bases.. Some of the earliest ones, even brand new, had a rainbow effect to the getter that did not signify that they were heavily used or about to wear out. Somebody offered me a bunch of them in boxes at a moderate price and I assumed that they were used and didn't buy them. That was a mistake as I could have easily doubled or more than doubled my money on them, but it was early into my days of reselling tubes and there was a lot I did not know. Not to mention, that particular antiques seller tended to be overpriced on most things and drovre a hard bargain, which made me leary.

    • @Alexis_du_60
      @Alexis_du_60 Před rokem

      @@goodun2974 I don't really remember what these were (I'm talking about something I saw some 15 odd years ago when I was a lil' kid), but the 4-pin base does ring a bell to me

  • @ExperimentIV
    @ExperimentIV Před rokem

    you’re the kind of guy i want to pick out unique tubes to use with a guitar amp, for real

  • @StephenGillie
    @StephenGillie Před rokem

    This is a variation of the electric arc lamp - the variation is using a different gas for the plasma, which uses less energy and probably gives a different illumination curve. The electric arc lamp isn't widely used today because the light is uncontrollably bright and harsh.

  • @tobiwonkanogy2975
    @tobiwonkanogy2975 Před rokem +1

    The xenon rectifier is a beauty, both are lovely but I much prefer the see-through deeper purple color . Their usage is way more important electrically but not without some beatification.

  • @tstahlfsu
    @tstahlfsu Před rokem

    Super cool video!!

  • @JCCyC
    @JCCyC Před rokem

    I assembled two vacuum tube circuits when I was a kid (late 70s / early 80s): a one-tube audio amplifier and a superheterodyne receiver. But since I was not a purist, I used a silicon diode instead of the rectifier tube so the 5-tube receiver was a 4-tube. 12BE6, 12BA6, 12AV6, 50C5 and 35W4 (not bought, used diode). That kind of transformer-less receiver was called "hot tail" in Brazil. Very simple kit, only AM band, no shortwave. I'd really like to find the parts to make one of these today. The tuning and IF coils are probably the hardest to find.

    • @JCCyC
      @JCCyC Před rokem

      Hey again! I still have the kit's schematics! www.dropbox.com/s/r8ze2e6jpzkw3a5/20220815_232724.jpg?dl=0

  • @LordSaberwolf
    @LordSaberwolf Před rokem +1

    OD3 Tubes glow good, and you can see the power beam inside.

    • @DrewskisBrews
      @DrewskisBrews Před rokem

      There are various gas-filled regulator tubes - the most easily-identified ones are in the "zero" series: 0D3, 0C3, 0A2. There is no cathode heater, hence the 0-volt designation. Also of interest, if you can find one, is the 0A4G cold-cathode triode. There are some very interesting applications suggested for that one in the RCA datasheet. (Such as remote control of line voltage via RF signals transmitted through the line being switched)

  • @mylestechnological7031
    @mylestechnological7031 Před rokem +1

    What a surprise I was just working with some Mercury Arc lamps for water disinfection

  • @rotaxtwin
    @rotaxtwin Před rokem +1

    I didn't realize that the mercury rectifier tubes were capable of such current, that's pretty hip. There's an old substation down the road that used to rectify 600 V for the trolley buses around the city and they used mercury rectifiers, originally at least. Would have been cool to see some 600V 3-phase arc happening.

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před rokem +1

    The 3B28 was designed to replace the 866A.

  • @JCCyC
    @JCCyC Před rokem

    Yeah! Now all you need is two big electrolytic caps, a power resistor, and you have your radio's +B.

  • @GeeWillikersMan
    @GeeWillikersMan Před rokem +1

    Okay, off topic. I see that can of DeoxIT. Who else hates the way the residual drips out of the straw onto your desk? Drives me nuts.

  • @simona625
    @simona625 Před rokem

    You're right, gorgeous colours... I'd love to see a full rectification on the oscilloscope...

  • @maurizio9616
    @maurizio9616 Před rokem

    Amazing !

  • @terrypokorny3858
    @terrypokorny3858 Před rokem

    very nice mercury vaper tube and xeon tubes i use to worn in broadingcasting and we used an old Gares gy 250 transmitter on am it had i belive the 8008 tube for recitifaction at about 1400 volts and they really glowed nicely under full load.

  • @JimAlfredson
    @JimAlfredson Před rokem

    Reminds me of the argon filled OC3 regulator tube that's in classic Leslie speaker tube amps like the 122.

  • @leandrolaporta2196
    @leandrolaporta2196 Před rokem

    Hahaha thousands of tubes! You are like me , you buy tubes I buy analog meters (needle ones) I simply love.them, I buy them and later figure it out what to build so I can use them xD
    The xenon tube es awesome! I also love the glow of the thyratrons! Don't know if you have any laying around , I bet you got a collection of them xD
    Looking forward 4 your next vid,.tkz

  • @whiskeytuesday
    @whiskeytuesday Před rokem

    I know virtually nothing about tubes relatively speaking but it seems like it makes sense in my head that Xenon gas would sink less voltage than mercury vapour. Either because of the phase or the density or because it's a noble gas or some combination of reasons. Fascinating either way.

  • @krzysztofwaleska
    @krzysztofwaleska Před rokem +4

    It would be great to look at thyratrons, regulated. To show how it changes during different phases of ignition and various loads, inductive with overload included. But it's hard to simulate.

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem

      You know, that is actually something I've wanted to play with for a while. Using phase shifting on the grid of a thyratron to build an adjustable and/or regulated power supply, but you're right, it's pretty tough to get it just right. Plus, the little 2D21 thyratrons I have aren't quite up for power supply duty. Hmm, time to hit eBay for some bigger thyratrons...

    • @krzysztofwaleska
      @krzysztofwaleska Před rokem

      @@UsagiElectric i have only heard of it in my middle shool. In the meantime I loved vacuum technology. In the old days I have ridden in electrical grid busses that used it. No way to watch them - closed somewhere in the back. Only stories. It would be beautifully satisfying to watch them work sililarly like in the stories!

  • @Damaraja
    @Damaraja Před rokem

    Super cool 🤙

  • @JeepinBoon
    @JeepinBoon Před rokem

    I love Thyratrons! I have quite a selection and haven't seen them glow in over five years.

  • @Unfinished80
    @Unfinished80 Před rokem

    Can you gus imagine how hot it must have been to work in a room full of those things running? It probably cost a small fortune to run them and cool them. Thanks for another great video!

    • @CATech1138
      @CATech1138 Před rokem +1

      Water jackets….pump and plumbing…..pond with a lovely spray water fountain
      I used wonder why the power radio stations had such beautiful lands scraping…..then one day, while looking at 22 inch tall water cooled 50,000 watt output tubes, the light bulb in my head begin to glow “DUH, closed loop evaporative cooling”…bet those power and transmitter rooms were sweat boxes

  • @robertmeyer4744
    @robertmeyer4744 Před rokem

    nice look at some old rectifier tubes. I have worked on a old AM broadcast transmitter that had 12 866A tubes . 2 sets of 3 phase. had delay relay to pre heat the 866 before the HV came on. also with the modulation of transmitter the glow would dance around . also 866A give off UV so protect eyes. also some ham radio amps use 866A with 811A tubes. I have one. the Xenon can be used in place. today HV diodes are used. I like old tubes as well . many still made today. 811A, 572/B ,3- 500ZG and Fender still use KT66 and KT 88 on new amps. I like NIXI and VFD tubes. you can make video on 0A2, 0B2 ,0D3 gas voltage regulator tubes. the different gas is different color and a different voltage. also the 6E5 EYE tube and types are neat as well. today I work on 4CW2000A7 tubes 4 in a transmitter water cooled . The ATSC TV transmitter has 2 IOT tubes . Inductive output tubes, lot of tubes still in use today .

  • @SigEpBlue
    @SigEpBlue Před rokem

    A beefy Variac feeding that transformer would serve you well in bench tests like these, and would allow you to ditch the series resistor, while also allowing you to slowly apply voltage to the filament.
    Love that HP oscilloscope, btw!

  • @MarcelHuguenin
    @MarcelHuguenin Před rokem +2

    I could be wrong but if I remember correctly when CuriousMarc was repairing the power supply of the teletype there were also some of these blueish purple glowing tubes in. They are awesome anyway.

    • @SomeMorganSomewhere
      @SomeMorganSomewhere Před rokem

      There's another style of gas-discharge tube in this vein which behaves more like a zener diode, those continued to crop up even as things became more solid-statey over time so it might have been one of those.

  • @MrGreen428
    @MrGreen428 Před 10 měsíci

    It'd be cool to see you do a video on voltage regulator tubes like OD3s.

  • @garyjohnson4608
    @garyjohnson4608 Před rokem

    Am really looking forward to the next time you fire up the Centurion for another experiment/project !!!!!!!

  • @Bobbias
    @Bobbias Před rokem

    I was really hoping to see a full wave rectifier made from these operating together, but oh well, they're still cool (hot? Those filaments do get damn hot) as hell individually.

  • @Santor-
    @Santor- Před rokem

    Very cool.

  • @mohamedabdelkader8786
    @mohamedabdelkader8786 Před 4 měsíci

    I have these tubes in a high voltage generator that we use for calibration. I was curious about the glowing coming out of this generator tubes but now I have an idea of what it might be.

  • @ATOMSHAMRADIO
    @ATOMSHAMRADIO Před rokem

    Love the plasma color 😍📻⚛

  • @DrBovdin
    @DrBovdin Před rokem +6

    Just avoid staring too much at them, and protect your skin. Especially for the Hg valve. The nasty UV from them can hurt you fairly quickly if the envelope lets it through.

    • @chriscarter2101
      @chriscarter2101 Před rokem +3

      poly carbonate safety specs will help

    • @UsagiElectric
      @UsagiElectric  Před rokem

      A large majority of the UV light is blocked by the glass envelope and there shouldn't be nearly enough passing through cause UV burns. Though, protecting your eyes is in general good advice around old electronics!

    • @DrBovdin
      @DrBovdin Před rokem +1

      @@UsagiElectric that’s nice. You would otherwise notice it quite soon after it strikes as you would have an (un-)healthy dose of ozone permeating the area around the valve, and unless you are one of those who cannot sense it, your nose will be an excellent sensor to determine if the envelope is opaque enough to the nasty UV.
      Cheers

  • @SameAsAnyOtherStranger
    @SameAsAnyOtherStranger Před rokem +1

    Back when 16bit music CDs first became a thing their sound was decried as sterile and lacking warmth, so a lot of people jumped on the tube preamp/amp band wagon. At that time oil caps and transformers made tube circuits ridiculously expensive. Hard core purists stuck with tube rectifiers, but it was a lot cheaper to have/make power supplies made from semiconductors. I'm in the school of if it goes through one tube in the output stage, that's good enough.

  • @otherunicorn
    @otherunicorn Před rokem +7

    I have some NOS 866As (half-wave filament type mercury vapor rectifier), and they come with warning labels in their boxes. "Warning, preheat tube for minimum of 60 minutes at first installation" and, more importantly "CAUTION X-RAYS. This device may produce X-rays when energized. Operation personnel must be protected by appropriate shielding. X-ray warning signs or labels should be permanently attached to equipment directing operating personnel never to operate this device without X-ray shielding in place."

    • @wendellporter4875
      @wendellporter4875 Před rokem

      i got some of them too i plan to put them to use at some point just got a few others projects to finish first

    • @DanafoxyVixen
      @DanafoxyVixen Před rokem +6

      Xrays can only be generated if the anode voltage is high enough, but it has to be at the extreme end of where the 866 is normally operated. at voltages less than 5kv (where the bulk use of 866's were) its safe, at voltages over 10kv, then its wise to shield

    • @otherunicorn
      @otherunicorn Před rokem +1

      @@DanafoxyVixen good to know. It does say "may produce" not "will produce" after all.

    • @KlodFather
      @KlodFather Před rokem

      @@DanafoxyVixen - There is a good example of this from Glasslinger on CZcams who made an xray tube and was using a 30kv power supply on it and got some astounding xrays out of it. That bastard was hot... Much hotter than the real xray tubes from GE for medical devices. Xrays produced at 15KV are soft but when you get above 20kv and start heading to 30 and 50kv, they get nasty and the frequency of the emissions is much higher and can cause a lot of damage or a burn. This is dangerous stuff.

  • @flaplaya
    @flaplaya Před rokem

    All these years I thought it was the charge of the gas that somehow rectified AC.. "The one heated electrode".. Very good video thank you for teaching me this.. Looking at an "RCA IK3" hv tube I purchased a lot online for like 10 bucks. Amazing how the high vacuum allows electrons to flow but not breakdown.. The glass shell glows, guess it conducts better.. Awesome bygone technology that is excellent for HV tinkering.

  • @loganjoy-koer5936
    @loganjoy-koer5936 Před rokem

    with 4 of those tubes you could make a full bridge rectifier!