Importance of vacuum/pressure testing

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How did we go from vacuum testing to vacuum tubes... I'd post a pic of my vacuum tube tester to try steer things back on to testing... but that would be flawed logic, & this is far nicer to look at...
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Bhwahahahaha is that yours? I LOVE it! I see a bunch of 12AX7/AU7 type preamp tubes. Is that power tube an EL34 or a big 6L6? It’s gorgeous.

Nice blackplate halos on those 12AX7’s of AT7’s or whatever they are. I used to be able to ID most of that stuff on sight but it’s been a LONG time since I had loads and loads of tubes… (although I still gots some for sure 😁)
 
It's my dads, along with a multitude of other valve based components & half dozen valve amps, driving a bunch of electrostatic speakers - I'm just the muggins that has to keep it all working.
I'd post more pic's but (aside from steering us further off topic) most of it is shamefully dusty
 
Just five volts. Probably wouldn't even feel it. Flip the amp over and there is about 2500 volts on the anode.
It will kill you.
Yep… that big heavy metal inside those… some of those capacitors can kill you even if the amp is unplugged… I remember what I was taught “be the one handed electrician” 🤣 (right so it doesn’t send current straight through your heart) 😳
 
The song of my people..... except it's the 40,000 bigger brother!

The toilets I could flush down the block on key up would tickle me pink.

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BBI is building one for somebody now that is supposed to do like 170,000 watts.
Of course, you would have to pay the power company to bring you in an 800 amp service.

Those super bowl guys are serious.
 
Remember the tube testers in drug stores ?
Yes! Drug stores had them in the days when you could get a milkshake at the soda fountain. They were almost the size of refrigerators, or so it seemed to a small boy. I was probably 6 or 8 years old and would go with my dad when he would bring a bag of tubes from a non-functioning TV or radio for testing. First you would look up the tube number, and the book would tell you the right socket to put it in and the various dial settings. It would then tell you if the tube was shorted, good, or weak. It was free and completely do it yourself. I don't remember if the drug stores sold tubes or just used the testers to bring people into the store. Those trips were one of the fun memories of being a 50's kid.
 
Well I was trying to read up how to pressure test my saw, but this thread got super side tracked. So this is for you guys..dad's workshop in the basement before we sold most of the stuff..FYI there were about 60K+ tubes total..pain in the butt.

My dad spent most of his career as director of the Memphis & Shelby County library system, but was a DIY-er to the core. He grew up in the Depression on a small farm in Mississippi, where you had to fix or fabricate everything or do without. His hobby was fixing radios, TV's, and Hi-Fi systems (pre-stereo) in the days of vacuum tubes. I would have had a similar stash of tubes, etc. had not a large oak destroyed his shop during a storm. He really grieved for that shop. Anyway, your tube collection may actually be valuable. With the resurgence of vacuum tubes in audiophile systems, some of those tubes might have value to collectors and restorers of vintage equipment.
 
Apologies to the OP, not trying to hijack the thread so last response.

The answer is yes and no. The tubes I mentioned were only the new in box..there were 3 times as many loose ones that needed to be tested. Very time consuming as some require 2 to 3 different tests and if one fails..no good.

Between retirement from the Air Force and retirement from Boeing, dad taught electronics at a vocational school. He was into Ham Radio and electronics all his life. Taught Ham Radio license classes, electronics, crystal trouble shooting, electronics theory, digital fundamentals as well as other classes in the basement for other Ham Radio enthusiasts. He also repaired Ham Radios in the basement for Hams and they sent him rigs from all over the US and some outside the U.S. He specialized in Collins radios.
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The amount of electronics was massive. Dad also helped Ham Radio widows with their estates and often there was left over stuff that just got added or often he would buy the whole estate. I sold some popular tubes but the task of cataloging and testing loose tubes was daunting. The ads just generated thousands of questions.."Will this work in my Kenwood Ham Radio xxxxx?" Etc. I took a minimum of 10 totes and rented 2 tables for over 10 years at the yearly Ham Radio and electronics swap meet.
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Very hard sell. People don't work on stuff as much. A lot of people have gone digital. Ham Radio people are cheap ***** in general and are always trying to low ball you. Plus with Hams similar to dad passing away, the market is flooded with huge estates like dad's. I barely made my table money back, definitely not my time and labor..first several years the money went to mom. I still have 10 totes loaded in the garage for this next year. I've kept some stuff for my own workshop, but dad had accumulated a massive workshop. There was over 1000 lbs of transformers that my scrap friend took...some were oil filled.

FYI..yes there's a ton of hardware, shrink tube, nuts and bolts..enough that I don't need to go to the hardware store.

So to answer your question..its a burden and time spent sorting and doing inventory was massive and ongoing.
 
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