- 6SN7
6SN7 is a dual
triode vacuum tube , on an 8 pin octal base. Although the 6S-- series tubes are often metal cased, the 6SN7 is generally found only in a glassGT size envelope. The 6SN7 is basically two 6J5 triodes in one glass envelope.History
Originally released in
1939 it was officially registered in1941 as the glass-cased 6SN7GT. DuringWorld War II a 6SN7A was developed as a slightly improved version, then also a more rugged 6SN7W for military use.With the advent of television the 6SN7 was well suited for use as a vertical-deflection amplifier. As screen sizes became larger, the tube started to have marginal voltage and power headroom. To address this, upgraded versions GTA (
General Electric , 1950) and GTB (GE,1954 ) were made with higher peak voltage and power ratings. The 6SN7GTA hasanode dissipation uprated to 5.0 watts "design center rating". The 6SN7GTB is identical to the 6SN7GTA except for a controlled heater warmup time, for use inTelevision sets with 600 mA series heater strings.The 6SN7 has a 6.3 V 600 mA heater/filament. The 12 volt filament equivalent is the 12SN7GT or 12SN7GTA. (12.6 V 300 mA filament) There was also a comparatively rare 8SN7 (8.4V@450mA filament intended for 450 mA series string TV sets)
Numerous other variations on the 6SN7 type have been offered over the years, including
7N7 (Sylvania1940 , loktal-base version), 5692 (RCA1948 , a super-premium version with guaranteed 10,000 hour lifetime),12SX7 (RCA1946 , intended for use in 26-volt aircraft electronics), 1633 (RCA 1941, also for 26-V radios), 6042 (1951 , another 1633 type), and 6180 (1952 ). American military designator for the 6SN7GA was VT-231, and the British called it CV1986 or CV1988. European designators include ECC32, 13D2 and B65. Each of the giant SAGE computer systems used hundreds of 5692s as flip-flops.While often used as an audio amplifier in the 1940-1955 period, usually in the driver stages of power amps, the 6SN7 was also very popular in television vertical sweep applications. The designer of the famous
Williamson amplifier , one of the first true high-fidelity designs, suggested use of the 6SN7 since it was similar to the British triodes that he used in his circuit. In most late-1950s applications it was replaced by the12AU7 , then bytransistor s in the 1960s.6SN7s are still manufactured in Russia and China under the old Soviet designator 6N8S, and continue to be used in some modern tube high-fidelity equipment.
The
6CG7 is a miniature tube (RCA, 1951) that has very similar ratings. It was also made as an 8.4V 450 mA series string type as the8CG7 .References
* [http://tubecollectors.org/ The Tube Collectors Association]
* [http://www.mif.pg.gda.pl/homepages/frank/sheets/082/6/6SN7.pdf Datasheet on the 6SN7]
*RCA Receiving Tube Manual, RC-14, Harrison NJ, 1940
* RCA receiving Tube Manual, RC-29, harrison NJ, 1973
*Sylvania Technical Manual 14th edition (reprint), 2000
* GE Techni-Talk, Volume 6 number 5, October-November 1954
* [http://www.mif.pg.gda.pl/homepages/frank/sheets/093/6/6CG7.pdf Datasheet on the 6CG7]
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