Monday, April 13, 2020

Tube of the Month : The 12B4A

Hi!

This month I'd like to show a low mu 9-pin miniature tube. Meet the 12B4A.




Like many interesting tubes the 12B4 was originally designed for TV sets for use in the vertical deflection unit. But of course it is usable for other applications as well.

The 12B4-A is a single indirectly heated triode. The pinout is shown on the left. It has a center tapped heater, which allows to heat it either from 12.6V or by utilising the center tap and paralleling the halves from 6.3V. The only difference between the 12B4 and 12B4A is the controlled heater warm up in the latter which allows it to be used in a series heater string with other tubes which need 600mA heater current (or 300mA if the series connection is used). Being a low mu triode it has an amplification factor of only 6.5 which is coupled with a plate resistance of a only 1kOhm. This results in a healthy transconductance of 6300 micromhos. The 12B4A is designed for rather high current operation with peak currents allowed to reach 100mA.
Although it is designed for low voltage operation, it can withstand high plate voltages up to 550V with peaks allowed to reach 1000V. The maximum plate dissipation is 5.5Watts. All this in a tiny miniature tube. The parameters would make it usable for example in line stages or as output tube in phono preamps or DACs, offering nice low output impedance. See the General Electric data sheet for all specifications. I never used the 12B4 myself and only stashed away a few of them many years ago. The 12B4 was quite popular among tube amplifier builders in the 1990ies but I haven't seen it mentioned much lately. As always let's have a look at the plate curves in the data sheet and compare them to the curves taken from a tube with the tracer:





It looks quite decent. I would not use it in applications where it needs to deliver large voltage swings like driver stages of power amps, but in low level applications it should perform nicely.




Here we have a JAN-12B4A made by General Electric for the military.




Let's have a look at the tube in all it's glory.






The plate is split in two halves and exposes the grid at the sides.





A close up to the grid.




Nice gold pated grid wire.





Some more views:










The base:





The getter:




The packaging:





Next we have RCA 12B4A:








It shares the split plate structure but the grid is not gold plated.












Rogers:




Probably made by RCA.




Westinghouse:




JAN (Joint Army Navy) 12B4A from PhilipsECG:





Triad:




Amperex:





I guess we need to open one up to see the construction in more detail.




The top exposed:





The glass removed:







The plate halves are bent in U-shape to have a large surface area for good heat dissipation.




Removing one half of the plate gives a good view to the grid and cathode:







One half of the plate:




Grid and cathode fully exposed:







Just the grid:




Now let's see the tube in operation:




As expected the heater glow is fully visible between the plates:








What a little beast!


Best regards

Thomas






8 comments:

  1. Hi Thomas, nice review i use this valve in my dac as CF after a Sowter 1465 DAC transformer with very good results.
    my best approach for my tda 1541A DAC.
    Best regards Karsten

    ReplyDelete
  2. If you like this you'll love the compactron 13FM7 - you get (pretty much) one of these plus a high mu triode in one envelope. Makes a nice simple little one tube per channel triode amp. Now that I've said that I'll check your archive and find you've already written it up.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. https://vinylsavor.blogspot.com/2017/06/tube-of-month-6fm7.html
      ;-)

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  3. Thank you for getting to this tube(american you know). This is almost professional vindication for an amatuer amplifier builder like myself to use tubes outside their design parameters. My use is low watt high gain guitar amp. Push-pull, -62v cathode bias, 420v on the plates . Loud and proud! Blew my mind as well as bandmates. Tube Joy...Thomas Bauer

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  4. I really enjoy reading your posts.
    The 12B4 was used by Julius Futterman in one of his famous OTL designs.
    I have a pair of OTL monoblocks that use (30) 12B4A each!

    https://www.dropbox.com/s/m5uidynt4ubwxhq/2016-06-08%2020.54.42.jpg?dl=0

    https://www.dropbox.com/s/9whugldnkr61b2v/2016-05-31%2019.41.52.jpg?dl=0

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  5. I see people use it to drive vt25.
    Is it a good choice?
    Use one or both plates?

    Kind regards

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This depends on several things so that this question in isolation makes no sense. Depends on your requirements in terms of gain, how you want to couple it, etc. It is a single triode, so only one plate avaiable

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  6. Can folks indicate what their favorite 12B4A tube is? Thanks in advance.

    ReplyDelete