Making glass-to-metal seals for home­made vacuum tubes

maurycyz.com

52 points by zdw a day ago


alister - 2 hours ago

What was the large-scale commercial procedure for making electrodes that pass through the glass without letting air in? I assume that electronics manufacturers must have been making millions of such vacuum tubes in the past. Is the knowledge lost (or not practical for hobby use)?

LgWoodenBadger - 27 minutes ago

Would you be able to reseal the cracked glass and regenerate the vacuum through the other end?

More glass, epoxy, or similar?

projektfu - 2 hours ago

I was wondering about the feasibilty of this, but I thought that useful tubes needed a harder vacuum than that. Is this really "good enough" for a triode?

I figured the wire-holding/element-holding aspect of a standard tube was in the base, and the glass-to-base seal is the important part. You can have a less-hot metal holding the filament and penetrating through the base. But I haven't looked carefully. These are my off-the-top-of-my-head thoughts about it.

smlacy - 2 hours ago

Hmmmm. Wonder if you could just induct through the glass with coils on each side? Seems perfect for high voltage applications?