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Yikes! Another CT-100 !
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Hmm, maybe someone should send the seller a link to that $750 set?
Is that a brightner wired into the CRT heater? So even if it's still under vacuum you can assume it's shot anyway. |
I think we are going to see alot more CT-100s in the future. Folks that own these sets may be worried about the CRTs going to air and might believe that there is no hope for rebuilding it. Therefore to them it is nothing more than a risk to them and they're looking to rid themselves of it.
My .02 for what its worth. |
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I also beleive that more collectors will start to unload their CT 100 sets.
With ZERO chance of CRT replacement/rebuilds, and the astronomical failure rate of the 15GP22, they become less and less attractive to even the most dedicated of collectors. |
With the market flooding, I put in the opening bid, but reserve not met. North Hills (a polite new name for the not-so-great neighborhood in Los Angeles formerly known as Sepuveda), is close enough to our place in Moorpark, CA that I could go get it easily if I won.
Charles |
There is not "zero" chance of rebuilding the tubes. In fact, RACS is making excellent progress. There will be a presentation at this year's Early Television Convention about the progress.
I don't believe there will be a flood of CT-100 sales. People collect old TV sets whether they work or not. |
Perhaps not "ZERO" chance, but "pretty freaking small".
I wonder when the last sucessful rebuild happened??? Probably when RCA was pulling unsucessful "new" tubes off of the line and "rebuilding" them. OK, I'll shut up now. |
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Everyone has a set or two that does not function. So what? They look nice on display even if not functional. Just my thoughts. Gilbert |
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Charles:
I have an adaptor to test the CRT. If you want to go look at the set in person you can borrow it if you'd like. Also, don't forget to get the serial numbers if you go. Steve |
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I have a Charger myself:D |
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Here's the thread: http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=247317 |
I'm in no way badmouthing the CT-100 as a collectible TV; CRT intact or compromised. I'm just pointing out that the market is flooding at the moment, and the final price will probably the best you'll get for the time being. When there's a lull, and no CT-100s are for sale for awhile, there are newbie TV collectors with good bankrolls, and the price skyrockets when one finally shows up on the market.
Charles |
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(Not currently being stored in a particularly ritzy setting. :)) http://videokarma.org/attachment.php...1&d=1270526471 http://videokarma.org/attachment.php...1&d=1270526471 http://videokarma.org/attachment.php...1&d=1270526471 . |
Nice find! :banana::banana::banana: Is that a Ctc-4 mask on top?
Ok, my head is spinning... within the last week or two *5* previously unknown CT-100s have surfaced? 1. The eBay $755 BIN set. 2. The eBay set that started this thread (aprox. $1200 Reserve not met now) 3. A set at Constantine tv. 4. A set found in an alley. 5. This bathroom set. jr |
My take on this...
You've a better chance of finding a chicken that will squeeze out two double-yoke eggs in sequence than you will have finding another $750 BIN restorable CT-100... the guy screwed up, as we all realize.
In spite of the current economy, a restorable Merrill is worth in the neighborhood of 2K, a good 15GP22 is worth in the neighborhood of 2K, and a dud 15GP22 is worth in the neighborhood of 0.2K. Pete |
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Pete didn't want to move ALL of his CT-100s when he emigrated from New Jersey recently and he made me an offer I couldn't refuse to ensure that THE SET (his original CT-100, the story of which had been chronicled in detail on his now extinguished website) would be preserved and displayed at the New Jersey Antique Radio Club's Radio Technology Museum at Infoage. |
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Current bid is at $1700. The reserve has been met and the $5000 BIN has been lifted. The seller reports, the chassis S/N appears to be B8000316 and the cabinet S/N is 538; the getters are shiny and there is filament continuity. |
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- Kevin |
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I couldn't agree with you more. Also, it would be best for any potential bidder/buyer to arrange for an exhaustive crt check by a qualified person and to make the sale contingent upon the crt test results. |
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jr |
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I'd recommend testing the crt for gas (air), with an HV source, before connecting a tester. |
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John |
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I liked Pete's site too...... :tears:
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1. Liability... I really would not want to be the person operating the CRT checker, if that test blows the heaters, unless the owner of the tube fully understands the the possibility that the test might "finish off" the tube.:no: 2. If the heaters blow it is indeed "game over" for the tube (except for rebuild). If they are intact, there still might be a very slim possibility to save it... Perhaps Scotty can re-flash the getters? :scratch2: just my 2cents (or less) worth, jr |
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As far as "game over" or not... I'm skipping definition of terms because I know you're very knowledgeable technically. The getter flash probably has a capacity of a few hundred liter-microns before it is used up. If the getter flash is gone you've probably had that much air enter. It's less effective for nitrogen, the few hundred liter-micron figure is for oxygen. You probably have at least a few hundred liter-microns of air to deal with once you find a gassy 15GP22. I'm not sure how the getter in the 15GP22 is made, but it's probably a large ring at the end of the gun. The ring could be a channel or a tube. If it's a tube then it has a thin wall that bursts when it's heated and the barium evaporates out. If it's a channel, then it's probably a stable barium alloy like BaAl4, that reacts exothermically with a nickel support once above 800C and quickly reaches higher temperatures evaporating the barium. Nickel powder is also added to BaAl4 powder, but I don't think this technology existed then. Any barium left to flash will be minimal and you have a lot of gas to deal with. The cathodes will be deactivated. During the activation barium oxide is reduced to barium forming a thin layer of barium metal on the barium oxide. Any metallic barium will have turned to an oxide if the tube was gassy. It is reduced either by silicon that was added to it or by the nickel cathode base metal. The nickel will have formed some nickel oxide and might prevent another reduction of the barium oxide. I have a bunch of 6J6's that have air in them. I've thought about adding a pump-out and see if I can reactivate the cathodes. I suspect it won't work, but it would be fun to try. Finding the time is hard though. John |
John said:
"I'm not sure how the getter in the 15GP22 is made, but it's probably a large ring at the end of the gun. The ring could be a channel or a tube. If it's a tube then it has a thin wall that bursts when it's heated and the barium evaporates out. If it's a channel, then it's probably a stable barium alloy like BaAl4, that reacts exothermically with a nickel support once above 800C and quickly reaches higher temperatures evaporating the barium." In the case of the 15GP22... The getters appear to be the "stirrup" style mounted in the neck... looks like there are 6. IIRC, not all getters were exothermic. "Any barium left to flash will be minimal and you have a lot of gas to deal with." I 100% agree with this. But if the tube were mine and I had an RF generator, and a getter "wand" I would try it. "I have a bunch of 6J6's that have air in them. I've thought about adding a pump-out and see if I can reactivate the cathodes. I suspect it won't work, but it would be fun to try." Back in my old "poor starving young engineer" days, I kept an old CTC-4 going by re-flashing and re-activating the 6CB5 HO tubes several times (darn things were expensive and I had access to an "engineering tube lab")... your experiment sounds like fun :yes: jr |
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I don't want to watch the expression on his face when I destroy his crt's filament. I can't run that fast, anymore. |
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Your comments about the 6CB5 are encouraging. I'll have to try it. I can evacuate the 6J6 without needing to bother with the getter and I can RF heat the elements to outgas them. Quote:
The Tesla coil vacuum tester that I have would probably scare them if they had never seen one before. Of course since I'm not actively searching for one, it's easy for me to say. Maybe I'd be of a different opinion if I were about to make an offer for one. John |
Re-evacuate
Isn't there a small copper tube nipple under or around the Black pin base?
If the filaments are good and then the base carefully removed; couldn't one vacuum pump the tube back down to around 1 X 10-5 or 1 X 10-6 ,and after applying VAC-U-Seal over the leak paths while still pumping (of course) . But then again you would only tap into this tube nipple if you knew the tube had already gone to air. |
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You can read more about the process by searching this forum for "15GP22". |
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You need much better vacuum than this for long life. If rebuilding options were available I'd rather go that route if I had one that didn't work, rather than expending resources on a repair that wouldn't last long. John |
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jr |
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I think some of the high power klystrons basically have an ion-pump built into them. John |
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John |
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