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6U5/6G5 Tuning Eye Tube Questions
Hello everyone I have a question concerning the 6U5/6G5 Tuning Eye tube, for some reason or another I've noticed that when I was working on a late 1950s vintage Magnavox Console (yes the one I accidentally broke the tone control on and that the record player was seized up on so bad that I ended up breaking the speed control knob on it), anyways I noticed that before the tone control broke on it and what not that the tuning eye tube on it responded very well to signals and glowed nice and bright, but then when I gave the unit back to the guy for him to get rid of because it wasn't worth fixing without having to spend a ton of dough trying to hunt down a new tone control switch that may or may not be a proper replacement and having to hunt down a new record player for it, etc, I bought the tubes from the unit off of the guy and I went to try the tuning eye tube from the old magnavox console in my old Well Gardner console from the early 1940s which uses the same exact tuning eye tube as the old magnavox did I noticed that the tube didn't glow as brightly in the Wells Gardner console as it did in the Magnavox and I'm wondering why that is, because the tube is a perfectly good tube yet but yet it don't glow very brightly inside the Wells Gardner Console vs how brightly it glowed in the Magnavox console.
Does anyone know why a tuning eye tube would glow like its supposed to in one radio but not in another radio? Any info would be appreciated. -Levi P.S. the Wells Gardner Console was completely recapped whereas the Magnavox wasn't, so I don't know if that would make a difference or not. |
#2
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There's usually a resistor (half watt, typically one meg.) hidden inside the socket and it drifts 'waay up in value.
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#3
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Quote:
By the way the Tuning Eye tube Socket in the Wells Gardner is a replacement from a 1950s Silvertone Console that was the same vintage as the Magnavox Console was, because the original Tuning Eye Tube socket on the Wells Gardner Console had cloth wires that the insulation was splitting in several spots exposing bare wire and was causing the tuning eye tube to not work at all period. I think I even replaced the original 1 Meg 1/2 watt resistor in that replacement tuning eye tube socket with a carbon film resistor from radio shack and it still wasn't letting the tuning eye tube glow very brightly... |
#4
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is the eye tube getting its normally specified plate voltage? if that is low it could explain the dim tube.
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#5
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I don't know about what the plate voltage should be or whether or not its getting its proper plate voltage, I just replaced the socket and went from there not thinking of it when I tested it because all of the tuning eye tubes I had at the time of recapping this old Wells Gardner radio were tubes that were previously used and I was thinking that they were dim because they were maybe heavily used tubes, but when I put the Magnavox tube in place and it was still dim even though it was nice and bright on the Magnavox Console it came out of I knew there had to be something wrong, but as to what I'm not sure because I had previously replaced all of the paper caps and power supply caps in this radio but it didn't seem to help, not even replacing the dropping Resistor in the tuning eye tube socket so there must be something that I had missed in this radio that's causing the tuning eye tube to glow dimly, as to what I'm not sure, and most of the resistors tested within spec yet.
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Audiokarma |
#6
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Max plate (pin 2 through 1 meg resistor) and target (pin 4) are listed at 250 volts, although it may have been fairly common practice to push that spec a bit to obtain higher brightness, at the expense of life of the tube.
jr data sheet: http://www.r-type.org/pdfs/6e5.pdf |
#7
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So If I were to get a lower plate voltage reading than the specified 250 Volts then what should I look for component wise that could be causing the low plate voltage? Update: I measured Pin 2 and got a little over 200 Volts (around 208 Volts DC) and at pin 4 I got around 248 Volts DC, So I'm not sure what to make of those results but I'm guessing that both pins 2 and 4 are supposed to measure around ~250 VDC? If so then that means pin 2 isn't getting the proper voltage it needs for some reason which is why the tuning eye tube is dim. Last edited by Captainclock; 01-18-2016 at 07:13 PM. |
#8
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Sounds as if it is working ok... the target voltage (pin4) is the correct voltage, pin 2 is expected to be less, due to the voltage drop accross the 1 meg resistor. I suspect that the Magnavox radio was running with the target voltage above max spec.
jr |
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Another thing that I've noticed though (and it may be due to the radio not being properly aligned or something like that) but the tuning eye tube doesn't seem to close completely when its on a really close local station, in fact it barely moves at all even though there are like 5 or 6 fairly strong local AM stations that coming loud and clear interference free on the radio, so what would cause the lack of movement on the part of the tuning eye tube's part when it comes to trying to tune in a strong local station? |
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You can monitor the voltage applied to the grid of the 6E5 (pin 3)... it takes about -8 volts to close the eye completely... if you are not getting that, the agc circuit is possibly not working correctly or signals are weak or set needs alignment. If you are getting -8 volts on the grid when the radio is tuned to a strong station and the eye is not closing, suspect the 1 meg resistor.
Looks like you only have 2 very strong stations: http://radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/loc...req=&sort=freq jr |
Audiokarma |
#11
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I'm guessing that the radio may or may not be in need of a realignment because I never touched that part of the radio, all I did was recap the radio and replaced the original tuning eye tube socket with a more modern one, and that was it. I did notice that when the tuner is tuned closer to the bottom of the tuner range the tuner gets really scratchy and noisy almost like the sound a volume or tone control makes when it has dirty contacts. Last edited by Captainclock; 01-19-2016 at 07:42 PM. |
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Did you examine the Radio-Locator chart that I linked to? The chart lists only 2 "Very Strong" stations heard in Elkhart; WCMR 1230 and WTRC 1340, all the rest are listed as "Moderate" to "Very Weak". I would not expect to see full eye closure or even very much movment on a majority of the AM stations that you can receive.
jr |
#13
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The IFs may have drifted a bit off-peak with age, reducing the gain. It's easy to re-peak them, especially with a tuning eye. Just the barest fraction of a turn either direction will usually get 'em back on peak.
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#14
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And yes I did look at that chart and I should know about those stations because I've lived in the Michiana Area all my life (27 Years to be exact, because that's how old I am) and I know for a fact that most all of those stations are able to be picked up fairly clearly on most of my vintage radios and stereo equipment I have. |
#15
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I'll probably give that a try.
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Audiokarma |
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