Ne2 or Ne51 or whatever you have in it, are good for protecting hollow state 
front ends. As they ionize between 50 and 90 volts, they will conduct static 
buildup before it builds enough to open a coil in the front end. Although i 
have never heard of that happening either. Commercial receivers sometimes use 
more expensive devices like Claire makes, with a narrow specification for 
breakdown voltage. The capacitance of a neon bulb, before it ionizes, is low. 
For solid state RX, however, neons might not have low enough breakdown to 
protect fets, varactors, etc. You cannot simply put an MOV or transorb across a 
HF circuit as it will have a lot of capacitance. Sometimes back to back diodes 
are applied. Spark gaps and gas tubes still rule. 
John 
K5PRO

> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 2 Mar 2009 00:57:58 +0000 (UTC)
> From: [email protected]
> Subject: [AMRadio] Receiver Antenna Input Question
> To: [email protected], [email protected],
>       [email protected]
> Message-ID:
>       
> <1524953191.2309561235955478082.javamail.r...@sz0147a.emeryville.ca.mail.comcast.net>
>       
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
> 
> Would appreciate some advice here. I have a National NC-303 receiver that I'm 
> restoring. I had a 75A-2 once that had a neon lamp (NE-2 ???) across the 
> antenna input connection to supposedly act as a surge supressor for 
> lightning, strong static charges?and strong rf energy from nearby 
> transmitters. Is this a good idea? Does this really work? Is there a better 
> device than a neon bulb? Appreciate any opinions, etc. 73, Bill, w0ng 

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