Light Bulb As a Vacuum Tube, Is This possible? #2

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2021
  • In an earlier video I showed that a light bulb with two filaments can be used as a diode. In this video I will try if it is also a usable triode with which you can build a tube amplifier.
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Комментарии • 29

  • @jrkorman
    @jrkorman 2 года назад +7

    Tubes containing a gas - see thyratron. Had to look up the specifics as it has been 40+ years since I was taught about those things!

  • @Backwoods-Bob
    @Backwoods-Bob 2 года назад +4

    Had a sealed beam headlight bulb that had a rockchip in it. Filled up with rainwater above the filaments and it still worked.

  • @zinckensteel
    @zinckensteel 6 месяцев назад +2

    Holy crap! I did a bunch of experiments on this very same topic a few years ago. I exclusively experimented with foil externally applied to the bulb as an electrostatic grid/control electrode. With a few carefully selected bulbs I was able to see linear audio band voltage gain of more than 1 but less than 2 during triode-like operation supporting little more than 150 microamps at best even with several hundred volts on the anode. Thyratron-like operation was much easier to achieve and could generally support a current of 1mA or more. I was not able to get one of these things to do anything useful at RF. I should add that I only used bulbs that showed signs of having a high vacuum rather than an inert gas fill. Hitting them with the discharge of a small tesla coil in a dark room will show a radically different kind of glow depending on the vacuum level. The classic purple filamentous arcs mean a bulb is unsuitable. Also, the bulbs will not last long when operating at more than 10mA - if you had observed the thing via welding glass you likely would have seen arc running from the cathode to the anode - I have run gassy bulbs in this manner, and the arc can be switched off with an external magnet, so it could be used as a latching thyratron of sorts, maybe.

  • @agranero6
    @agranero6 10 месяцев назад +3

    Car lamps used on the headlights have an halogen gas inside. The gas reacts with the tungsten vapor and redeposits it to the filament avoiding it from get opened and to dark tungsten deposits to form on the glass. This reaction only happens at high temperatures, that is why halogen lamps work so hot. Normal lamps use argon because it is easier to fill it with an inert gas than to make vacuum, an d vacuum makes lamps to implode. Electron tubes can also be filled with gas (on the diagrams if the tube has a black dot inside it means a gaseous tube, like a tyratron).

  • @tushar8133a
    @tushar8133a 2 года назад +1

    Very well tried! Thanks for upload

  • @pickoftheglitter
    @pickoftheglitter 2 года назад +1

    very clever!

  • @abasabasi8333
    @abasabasi8333 Год назад

    Perfect

  • @Steven-re7xt
    @Steven-re7xt 7 месяцев назад

    Try a sheet of coper cladding isolated from ground but first burn one side to create oxide. Then you get more dc. From the light its selfe. Salute!

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect 2 года назад +4

    It would be really annoying if after spending all that time deliberately blowing the grid... if the cathode decided to blow on it's own.

  • @lebirb9497
    @lebirb9497 2 года назад +1

    cute

  • @Kapcaniew
    @Kapcaniew Год назад +1

    I know it's not a new video, but I just came across a burnt H4 bulb from a car headlight and it reminded me of your attempt. H4 has a metal reflector that separates the two filaments - maybe this geometry would work better?

    • @DoctorVolt
      @DoctorVolt  Год назад +1

      H4 bulbs are filled with halogen gas. So I guess that they won´t work at all.

    • @Kapcaniew
      @Kapcaniew Год назад +1

      @@DoctorVolt Ah, you are obviously right. It didn't occur to me that halogens are pressurized up to 8ATM, I was convinced it's still low pressure gas. Well then, my search for a weird light bulb continues.

    • @michaelszczys8316
      @michaelszczys8316 Год назад

      There's probably one out there somewhere that will work.
      I know after watching this I'll be checking every old light bulb.

  • @ambikaprasadkapoor1178
    @ambikaprasadkapoor1178 Месяц назад

    How about using them for Preamps. Especially Phono Preamp?????

    • @DoctorVolt
      @DoctorVolt  Месяц назад

      Because they do not amplify at all.

  • @DavidMills_Physicist
    @DavidMills_Physicist 2 года назад +1

    Can you wind a coil around the bulb and use a magnetic effect to control the electron flow between cathode and anode?

    • @DoctorVolt
      @DoctorVolt  2 года назад +1

      Yes, this could work. But I think that the effect would be too small, so that the bulb will still not amplify.

    • @DavidMills_Physicist
      @DavidMills_Physicist 2 года назад +1

      @@DoctorVolt I wonder if you could "bias" it off with a small permanent magnet, and then use the coil to reverse that field and allow a small current to flow. Might be a tricky engineering task to get it to work.

    • @terrystearns1196
      @terrystearns1196 2 года назад +2

      Love your Experiments.. keep it up

  • @SheikhN-bible-syndrome
    @SheikhN-bible-syndrome 2 года назад

    Can you make your own tube by filling a glass test tube with argon ? Or does it have to be a vacuum?

  • @savadimitrijevic4668
    @savadimitrijevic4668 Год назад

    Can you make a simple two bit adder with it

    • @DoctorVolt
      @DoctorVolt  Год назад

      I could even build a computer with light bulbs. But I couldn't afford the electricity bill :)

  • @iwex7331
    @iwex7331 10 месяцев назад

    Can it work like a rectifier diode with direct heating🤔

    • @DoctorVolt
      @DoctorVolt  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, but with very low current of a few milliamps.

  • @weareallbeingwatched4602
    @weareallbeingwatched4602 2 года назад

    Wow. What the...

  • @noel3422
    @noel3422 Год назад +1

    Cheap ass bulbs last a long time wonder why tubes are so expensive lol.