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Re: New to Group
Don By "big pin" I was referring to tubes that were common before the arrival of the octal tube around 1935.? The hallicrafters 5T uses all pre-octal tubes found in the RC-11 RCA tube manual (circa 1933) so it's design was completed before the octal tube was available to the radio designer.? The 5T must have been on the drawing board of a company bought by hallicrafters or it was the pet project of an early hallicrafters employee. Sorry for the confusion and the use of the term, I assumed that everyone was familiar with this?idiom. Jim Logic: Method used to arrive at the wrong conclusion, with confidence.? Murphy
On Wednesday, April 2, 2025 at 04:20:18 PM CDT, don Root <drootofallevil@...> wrote:
Hi Jim, I have been trying to reply but keep getting diverted. One problem is understanding the definition of a “big pin” tube. How big is “big”? ?I can find no definition. the 4,6,and older 7 Ing tubes have two ?0.156 ?[5/32?] inch pins and some .125 [1/8]inch pins but the 5 pin tube has only the smaller pins. ? Anyhow, I googled with “what is? a "big pin" radio tube?” ????and AI replied as follows” AI Overview A "big pin" radio tube, also known as a vacuum tube or electron tube, is a type of electronic device that uses the flow of electrons in a vacuum to control electrical signals, often used in older radio and audio equipment.? Here's a more detailed explanation:
A "big pin" radio tube is a type of vacuum tube, a device that uses the flow of electrons in a vacuum to control electrical signals.? ·? ·? How it works: Inside the tube, a heated filament (cathode) emits electrons, which are then controlled by a grid (a metal mesh) and attracted to a positively charged plate (anode).? ·? ·? Why it's called "big pin": The term "big pin" likely refers to the size and shape of the base or connector pins on the tube, which are larger than those on smaller tube types.? ·? ·? Examples: Some common "big pin" tube types include the 6L6, 6V6, 6K5, and 6C5.? ·? ·? Historical Context: Before the advent of semiconductor devices, vacuum tubes like these were widely used in various electronic applications, including radios, audio amplifiers, and television sets.? ·? ·? Modern Usage: While largely replaced by transistors and other solid-state devices, vacuum tubes are still used in some applications, particularly in audio amplifiers and specialized electronic equipment where their unique sound characteristics are desired.? ? More stuff later. ? From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jim Whartenby via groups.io
Sent: Sunday, March 23, 2025 11:49 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [HallicraftersRadios] New to Group ? AFAIK, all of the hallicrafters listed below have metal front panels and are housed in metal cases.? The S-10 / SX-10 did have an optional mahogany?case that the metal case slipped into but I doubt that any were actually sold.? If the production numbers are correct, at one time I owned 1.5% of production!? That would be three of them out of some 200 reportedly made. Still have two. ? The 5T is an odd one.? It uses all big pin tubes so it is obviously a much earlier design.? It is either the first or fourth superhetrodyne design sold by hallicrafters. ? hallicrafters receiver models Information gleaned from Max de Henseler and Chuck Dachis books S-1, S-2, S-3 TRF-regen, 5 tubes, manufactured by Silver-Marshall?, 1934 ++++++++++++++++++++++
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? _,_ -- don??? va3drl |