This is a question about an older Mullard EL84 which exhibited, what for me is, a strange behavior. I would like to understand what is happening, so I hope it is OK too post here in the theory section.
I was checking my stash of old 60s / 70s EL84s with an adaptor thingy and the 1 Ohm resistor method to get an idea of what has accumulated here. I gave each tube five minutes to settle down and watched them stabilize at between 36 to 52 mA, measured at the cathode.
The Mullard tube in question looked like it would stabilize at about 48 mA, but it just did not settle down and the reading kept on creeping up. At 60 mA I was wondering what tube I could match it with. At 65 mA the paralleled tube to the right of it started showing slight signs of red- plating. At 70 mA I switched it off thinking that it could be an evil tube sent to unleash hell's fire in my living room.
My impression was that the increase in mA was exponential. The photo, from a second try, is taken at about 65 mA. For some reason the area on the second tube, which I perceived as the beginings of red-plating, shows up as lilac-blue on the photo. The evil tube looked very content all the time, not even a blush.
So my question is not, are some tubes bad, but what is actually happening? Is this what happens when a tube “runs away”? Or is this normal behavior for a tired tube?
(The amp is a home cooked Rocket / AC30 circuit running with 11.8W plate dissipation. The codes on the Mullard are "?x1 B6D BRITISH )
I was checking my stash of old 60s / 70s EL84s with an adaptor thingy and the 1 Ohm resistor method to get an idea of what has accumulated here. I gave each tube five minutes to settle down and watched them stabilize at between 36 to 52 mA, measured at the cathode.
The Mullard tube in question looked like it would stabilize at about 48 mA, but it just did not settle down and the reading kept on creeping up. At 60 mA I was wondering what tube I could match it with. At 65 mA the paralleled tube to the right of it started showing slight signs of red- plating. At 70 mA I switched it off thinking that it could be an evil tube sent to unleash hell's fire in my living room.
My impression was that the increase in mA was exponential. The photo, from a second try, is taken at about 65 mA. For some reason the area on the second tube, which I perceived as the beginings of red-plating, shows up as lilac-blue on the photo. The evil tube looked very content all the time, not even a blush.
So my question is not, are some tubes bad, but what is actually happening? Is this what happens when a tube “runs away”? Or is this normal behavior for a tired tube?
(The amp is a home cooked Rocket / AC30 circuit running with 11.8W plate dissipation. The codes on the Mullard are "?x1 B6D BRITISH )
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