Bottlehead Forum
General Category => Technical topics => Topic started by: the dude on July 29, 2015, 02:23:44 PM
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I have an enclosure which is compact and lends itself to my Quickie setup.
It would require the tubes to be laying down on their sides..
What say the vetters?
:)
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Yes. VTL used that mount often.
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I found an old article that specs a 3S4 for use in a radio control airplane receiver, that is mounted sideways. Makes me think it should be fine.
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I guess microphonics isn't an issue for airplane receivers :)
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This isn't an audio application, but I used a tube capacitor checker my Dad has, and it had a horizontally mounted tube that fell out a lot. The kit is pretty old, so maybe the socket is just worn out. Plus, the tube was on the larger side.. I'm thinking 3s4s are probably ok with decent quality sockets.
Dave
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The potential issue is of the filament sagging and shorting against a grid. But the 3S4 was designed for portable work where it would get bashed around a bit, so it's probably reasonably rugged.
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Many Thanks! I will start a thread with pictures soon... :D
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Adding to what the good Doctor says, one can check the Radiotron manual about tube mounting. There usually is a blurb when you have to watch out. Some DH power triodes or rectifiers can have filament sag and lightning possibilities if not mounted vertically. Sometimes, these power tubes can be mounted horizontally with the plates facing vertically so the filaments don't sag into the grids (pow!)
Check with your friendly tube manual! :D