
Hello Axel,
Merry Christmas to you too!
If I look at the pictures it seems to me you have already answered your own question! I now assume that you have connected the sockets 1 through 9 connected to the tube sockets (using lots of beads as described in the manual) (numbering is clockwise looking at the bottom of the tube socket.
The other sockets connected to the uTracer board.
All you need to make now are a bunch of jumper wires and connect the correct tube pin number to the correct uTracer socket as per the tube data sheet. This is actually the easiest part of testing a tube. Next you must decide which parameters of the tube you want to plot, and configure the GUI accordingly.
I’m not sure if I answered your question, but feel free to ask further details. It is of course difficult to explain everything here in a message, but I would recommend duplicating a few of the examples shown in the manual, and there are still more on Ronald’s website. Once you have that all figured out (it really helps in getting used to the GUI) you can start with duplicating charts in the tube data sheets.
Cheers, Bill van Dijk
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Hello Axel,
First of all a question about your lower row of connections. I understand G, K, F, F, S, A, they are marked on the uTracer board. Where do the additional screen and anode connections come from?
Secondly, the uTracer has three power sources (not counting the filament for now). Two high voltage ones, Anode and Screen, and one negative lower voltage for the Grid. The uTracer is designed to test one tube, although in the case of a dual triode (such as the 12AX7) both sections of the tube can be tested by using the second high voltage source for the second triode section. This is described extensively in the manual.
Now the case of the ECH81. Here you have essentially two very different tubes in one bottle, and in this case each has to be tested individually. It turns out that the ECH81 is actually an easy tube since most of the extra grids are connected internally, making it look like a simple pentode from the outside. The connections for the tetrode section would therefore be as follows:
A -> 6
K -> 3
F -> 4
F -> 5
S -> 1
G -> 2
Next test for the triode section would be:
A -> 8
K -> 3
F -> 4
F -> 5
G -> 9
S is not used for this test
It is not possible to test both sections in one test
Hope that helps.
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Hi Axel,
I just realized I forgot to address G3 (pin 7). For this tube in normal use it is connected externally to the grid of the triode section. For the purpose of testing (as per the data sheet) it is held at 0V, so you connect it to K along with pin 3.
The answers to most of these questions is in the data sheets.
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