I too want to see the results of the post mortem. What IS the mechanical reason 
for the spacer being free? Please tell.

John K
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jon 
  To: neonixie-l 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2017 8:27 AM
  Subject: [neonixie-l] Re: IN-13 Lifespan




  Sounds like a good excuse for a tube autopsy...


  If you are indeed over-driving the current then you'll be sputtering material 
off the cathode which after a while will have two effects. Firstly there will 
be some gradual darkening of the tube as the material deposits elsewhere. And 
secondly you'll see gross physical erosion of the cathode - you can see a 
similar effect on dekatron cathodes where the glow has been sitting stationary 
for a very long time (usually the zero cathode of the tubes making up the 
higher order decades of a multi-tube counter). Given that you describe a 'tink' 
noise, my guess is that the cathode has eroded to the point where it physically 
broke, perhaps under the thermal stress of being activated. Time for new tubes.


  The Soviet datasheets only promise 1000 hour life for IN-9 - I can't find a 
similar overall guaranteed life specification for IN-13. My experience is that 
they will last much longer than that if not overdriven.


  With regard to the current required to achieve full scale, yes there's 
normally some cathode poisoning which needs to be burned off when you first 
fire up the tubes (worse on IN-9 than IN-13), but then they should settle down 
and operate at the specified sensitivity. The last centimetre or so of the 
cathode is difficult to illuminate even in a well 'oiled' tube - they lose 
linearity at the upper extreme. Best thing to do is not to worry about trying 
to light up this bit.


  Cheers,


  Jon.
   

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