Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The tube socket melt down into the power supply and then the transmitter was beyond repair.
Not all fluorescent lights have starters, but if yours does, it will usually be located near a tube socket.
After loss of power, a phase dropped, the cooling for the tube and tube socket ceased.
The lead spacing was originally intended to allow plugging the device into a then-common tube socket.
Since the unusually high voltage can be potentially dangerous, most fixtures have an automatic cutoff switch in the tube sockets.
Transformers, large capacitors, tube sockets and other large components were mounted to the top of the chassis.
Panel Nut Wrench: It is a double ended tube socket type tool for removing nuts.
THD also does not mount their electro-mechanical components like jacks, potentiometers, switches and tube sockets to the board.
In the 1950s, printed circuit boards were introduced and tube sockets were developed whose contacts could be soldered directly to the printed wiring tracks.
Amphenol was founded in Chicago in 1932 by entrepreneur Arthur Schmitt, whose first product was a tube socket for radio tubes (valveholder bases).
To inspect the wiring and ballast, remove the deflector or disassemble the base, as well as any other parts necessary to expose the tube sockets and wiring.
As the Loewe set had only one tube socket, it was able to substantially undercut the competition since, in Germany, state tax was levied by the number of sockets.
Only these 3 address lines are connected to internal Tube sockets, as found in the BBC Master or Universal Second Processor Unit.
Commercial factory-built electronic products were constructed from generic, discrete components such as vacuum tubes, tube sockets, capacitors, inductors and resistors, and essentially hand-wired and assembled.
Cracks may result from stress in the glass, bent pins or impacts; tube sockets must allow for thermal expansion, to prevent stress in the glass at the pins.
Tube sockets were typically mounted in holes on a sheet metal chassis and wires or other components were hand soldered to lugs on the underside of the socket.
Matching plugs were also manufactured that let tube sockets be used as 8-pin electrical connectors; penurious experimenters would sometimes salvage the base from a discarded tube for this purpose.
This Emerson set also had a single tube socket, but because it used a four-pin base, the additional element connections were made on a "mezzanine" platform at the top of the tube base.
In vacuum tube trechnology, a top cap is a terminal at the top of the tube envelope that connects one of the electrodes, the other electrodes being connected via the tube socket.
Tube sockets are electrical sockets into which vacuum tubes (also known as valves) can be plugged, holding them in place and providing terminals, which can be soldered into the circuit, for each of the pins.
Some miniature tube sockets had a skirt that mated with a cylindrical metal electrostatic shield that surrounded the tube, fitted with a spring to hold the tube in place if the equipment was subject to vibration.
A secondary board provides the base onto which the tube sockets are mounted (although the pair of power tube sockets are mounted directly on the chassis with long leads connecting those to the secondary board).
On most tubes, the leads, in the form of pins, plug into a tube socket for easy replacement of the tube (tubes were by far the most common cause of failure in electronic equipment, and consumers were expected to be able to replace tubes themselves).