Except in direct heated cathodes like some rectifier tubes and really old power tubes like a 2A3, the heaters do not emit the electrons. The cathodes emit the electrons. All the heater does is make the cathode hot. That is its entire job. There is no heater emission, there is only cathode emission.
Oh someone will offer that some electrons do boil off the heater, but that is not part of the tube characteristic and is in fact not desirable. That is why we elevate the heaters by some DC amout, to PREVENT any electron emission from the heater itself.
The surface of the CATHODES erode away and they weaken their emission over time. But the heaters are not in that program. As long as the heater gets hot enough to make the cathode the 1500 degrees or whatever it is - I forget the exact number - then the heater is working. Heaters don't typically get a lot colder over their life. If I see a weak tube, I am going to assume the cathode is shot, not that the heater is cold.
Oh someone will offer that some electrons do boil off the heater, but that is not part of the tube characteristic and is in fact not desirable. That is why we elevate the heaters by some DC amout, to PREVENT any electron emission from the heater itself.
The surface of the CATHODES erode away and they weaken their emission over time. But the heaters are not in that program. As long as the heater gets hot enough to make the cathode the 1500 degrees or whatever it is - I forget the exact number - then the heater is working. Heaters don't typically get a lot colder over their life. If I see a weak tube, I am going to assume the cathode is shot, not that the heater is cold.
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