I know tube testers aren't indispensable for this kind of work, but I like this one a lot and use it frequently enough that I want to get it working right...
I've got a Sencore MU150 tube tester, which I completely overhauled about a year ago (replaced almost every component on the board, all 1% metal film resistors, full calibration). It was flakey before that, but since then has been rock solid, until this summer. I'm in Philadelphia and my shop has no A/C, so the humidity gets pretty high. All the tester's functions (shorts, emission, gm) are stable and repeatable EXCEPT the grid leakage function, which shows the all-too-common symptoms of reading leakage with no tube in any socket. When the humidity is low, it's fine. When the humidity goes above about 65%, I start having problems.
When I overhauled the tester, I made a point NOT to clean the face or the sockets with anything that would leave a residue -- only 99.8% anhydrous IPA and a toothbrush. Like I said, it's been fine for a while now. I've never cleaned it with anything else, but who knows what was used on it before I got it. I have isolated the problem to the sockets -- with the switches isolated, there are no leakage issues. My Fluke 8050A measures about 50-100 megohms (10-20 nS conductance) between most socket pins and between any pin and chassis, with the sockets disconnected from the rest of the circuit. Same meter, when measuring switch contacts, sees over 1000 megohms (<1 nS), regardless of humidity. So the socket panel is definitely the location of the problem.
Anybody have experience with this sort of stuff? I have a thing for old test gear and am particularly attached to this tester, but the leakage issue is a tough nut to crack.
What I was hoping to learn is:
Is anhydrous IPA the right stuff to use on the socket panel and socket pins? Should I be using something else like the Techspray Blue Shower stuff to clean it? Is there something super-strong I can try?
Is this normal and my expectations are just too high?
Is there a safe way to clean the sockets out, dry them out when the humidity is low, and then seal them with some sort of acrylic or lacquer, to prevent the problem from recurring? Or would that just be a waste of time?
The tester in question:
http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m1...257o1_1280.jpg
I've got a Sencore MU150 tube tester, which I completely overhauled about a year ago (replaced almost every component on the board, all 1% metal film resistors, full calibration). It was flakey before that, but since then has been rock solid, until this summer. I'm in Philadelphia and my shop has no A/C, so the humidity gets pretty high. All the tester's functions (shorts, emission, gm) are stable and repeatable EXCEPT the grid leakage function, which shows the all-too-common symptoms of reading leakage with no tube in any socket. When the humidity is low, it's fine. When the humidity goes above about 65%, I start having problems.
When I overhauled the tester, I made a point NOT to clean the face or the sockets with anything that would leave a residue -- only 99.8% anhydrous IPA and a toothbrush. Like I said, it's been fine for a while now. I've never cleaned it with anything else, but who knows what was used on it before I got it. I have isolated the problem to the sockets -- with the switches isolated, there are no leakage issues. My Fluke 8050A measures about 50-100 megohms (10-20 nS conductance) between most socket pins and between any pin and chassis, with the sockets disconnected from the rest of the circuit. Same meter, when measuring switch contacts, sees over 1000 megohms (<1 nS), regardless of humidity. So the socket panel is definitely the location of the problem.
Anybody have experience with this sort of stuff? I have a thing for old test gear and am particularly attached to this tester, but the leakage issue is a tough nut to crack.
What I was hoping to learn is:
Is anhydrous IPA the right stuff to use on the socket panel and socket pins? Should I be using something else like the Techspray Blue Shower stuff to clean it? Is there something super-strong I can try?
Is this normal and my expectations are just too high?
Is there a safe way to clean the sockets out, dry them out when the humidity is low, and then seal them with some sort of acrylic or lacquer, to prevent the problem from recurring? Or would that just be a waste of time?
The tester in question:
http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m1...257o1_1280.jpg
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