• Photocell connection

    From Liz Tuddenham@21:1/5 to All on Sun Mar 10 12:30:18 2024
    I've noticed that when gas-filled photocells were used in valve
    equipment, they were nearly always supplied with a low-impedance source
    of +ve voltage to the anode and the signal was taken off a resistor in
    the negative return. There is a blocking capacitor between the
    photocell cathode and the grid of the valve, so the standing current and
    DC conditions don't appear to be relevant.

    This means the photocell has to be connected by a 2-core screened cable,
    which was an expensive luxury in those days. It also has to be
    thoroughly screened to prevent hum, whereas the cathode half-cylinder
    would partly screen the anode and reduce the amount of extra screening
    needed; so what was the advantage of taking the signal from the cathode instead of the anode"?

    --
    ~ Liz Tuddenham ~
    (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply)
    www.poppyrecords.co.uk

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  • From Phil Hobbs@21:1/5 to Liz Tuddenham on Sun Mar 10 13:45:41 2024
    Liz Tuddenham <liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid> wrote:
    I've noticed that when gas-filled photocells were used in valve
    equipment, they were nearly always supplied with a low-impedance source
    of +ve voltage to the anode and the signal was taken off a resistor in
    the negative return. There is a blocking capacitor between the
    photocell cathode and the grid of the valve, so the standing current and
    DC conditions don't appear to be relevant.

    This means the photocell has to be connected by a 2-core screened cable, which was an expensive luxury in those days. It also has to be
    thoroughly screened to prevent hum, whereas the cathode half-cylinder
    would partly screen the anode and reduce the amount of extra screening needed; so what was the advantage of taking the signal from the cathode instead of the anode"?


    At a guess, it’s because it saved headroom to have a positive-going signal. There’s a well-defined dark level.

    Of course, in a general AC-coupled system, that doesn’t help as much unless the photocurrent waveform is known to be very asymmetrical.

    Cheers

    Phil Hobbs

    --
    Dr Philip C D Hobbs Principal Consultant ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics

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  • From John Larkin@21:1/5 to Liz Tuddenham on Sun Mar 10 11:04:12 2024
    On Sun, 10 Mar 2024 12:30:18 +0000, liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid
    (Liz Tuddenham) wrote:

    I've noticed that when gas-filled photocells were used in valve
    equipment, they were nearly always supplied with a low-impedance source
    of +ve voltage to the anode and the signal was taken off a resistor in
    the negative return. There is a blocking capacitor between the
    photocell cathode and the grid of the valve, so the standing current and
    DC conditions don't appear to be relevant.

    This means the photocell has to be connected by a 2-core screened cable, >which was an expensive luxury in those days. It also has to be
    thoroughly screened to prevent hum, whereas the cathode half-cylinder
    would partly screen the anode and reduce the amount of extra screening >needed; so what was the advantage of taking the signal from the cathode >instead of the anode"?

    Tube systems generally had a positive power supply, with a bit of
    ripple, so taking the small signal off the anode was a nuisance. A
    phototube usually needed to be shielded anyhow, unless it was
    measuring a very slowly changing light source.

    I just hung a cathode follower next to mine, phototubes or PMTs. That
    kept the speed up too.

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  • From Liz Tuddenham@21:1/5 to Phil Hobbs on Sun Mar 10 20:59:20 2024
    Phil Hobbs <pcdhSpamMeSenseless@electrooptical.net> wrote:

    Liz Tuddenham <liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid> wrote:
    I've noticed that when gas-filled photocells were used in valve
    equipment, they were nearly always supplied with a low-impedance source
    of +ve voltage to the anode and the signal was taken off a resistor in
    the negative return. There is a blocking capacitor between the
    photocell cathode and the grid of the valve, so the standing current and
    DC conditions don't appear to be relevant.

    This means the photocell has to be connected by a 2-core screened cable, which was an expensive luxury in those days. It also has to be
    thoroughly screened to prevent hum, whereas the cathode half-cylinder
    would partly screen the anode and reduce the amount of extra screening needed; so what was the advantage of taking the signal from the cathode instead of the anode"?


    At a guess, it’s because it saved headroom to have a positive-going signal. There’s a well-defined dark level.

    Of course, in a general AC-coupled system, that doesn’t help as much unless the photocurrent waveform is known to be very asymmetrical.

    The particular application I was thinking of was film projector sound.
    The signal is in the region of a few millivots and the photocell supply
    is about 80v, so headroom isn't a problem. The front end pentode is
    often triode-strapped to reduce partition noise.


    --
    ~ Liz Tuddenham ~
    (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply)
    www.poppyrecords.co.uk

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  • From dgb (David@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 11 12:38:42 2024
    On 10 Mar 2024 at 20:59:20 GMT, "Liz Tuddenham"

    <Liz Tuddenham>

    Claimed that there are lots of SPAM posts here.

    Please identify some by their MIDs.

    Thanks.

    --
    David

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  • From Liz Tuddenham@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 11 14:44:40 2024
    dgb <david@nomale.afraid.org> wrote:

    [...]

    One for the kill file.


    --
    ~ Liz Tuddenham ~
    (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply)
    www.poppyrecords.co.uk

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