If you’re old enough you might remember seeing one of these in a drug store, grocery store or even Radio Shack. You could pull all the tubes from your radio or TV, put them in a paper bag, and take them down to your local store to test. And hopefully you wrote down which one came out of which socket. Once you found the bad tube or tubes, the store proprietor would unlock the bottom and find new replacement tubes. And the price list is taped right inside the door.
I’m pushing 40 and while I know about vacuum tubes I definitely don’t remember seeing these bad boys around
I’m pushing 60 and these were around in my childhood. I never saw anyone use it because everything was solid state by then.
67 here. I played around for hours with old tubes at the closest “variety” store by me. Couldn’t afford new tubes even when I found a bad one - I was weird, and it was something to do.
Occasionally I’d see an actual TV repairman use it, otherwise it just sat there.
I suppose these would be a sweet novelty in a music store. No idea if tubes are in anything these days outside of amps.
Memory Unlocked. We had moved into a house that had an old 60s tube radio built into the wall, it was broken, but my dad went through steps to sort out the issues and pulles a few tubes out. I recall the door with the chart of valve types.
The radio/amp sounded great once fixed. It had these two luninous stripes that you watched as you dialed in a radio station. It was a tuning aid. you tried to get the lines as close as possible to know you had matched a frequency, but if you over dialed the stripes dissapated, and you had to scroll back a bit.I used to work at a TV repair shop, and the owner owned a lot of these in the surrounding 6 states. In the 80s, he sold them all to a German company for something like 1M, and the German company turned around and resold them for something like 6M 3 months later.
Cleaning out the shop one day, we found a bunch of the old tubes. I kept some and mocked up a display but never finished it.
Why are they worth that much?
He owned a lot of them and sold a lot of tubes every month, generating revenue. Not sure how much, but with solid state becoming more popular, the amount kept going down, so he sold. Not sure who the German company sold to, but I assume they went to a country that was behind the curve on technologies and still had a large number of tube electronics in service.
There is still old equipment that needs repair, and radio shops restoring old equipment for audiophiles…so I can see these holding value
I was in Georgia (the country) a few years back and visited a flea market, where, to my delight, several guys were selling a lot of Russian made tubes. I was inclined to buy a few, but didn’t have an opportunity to research the models on the spot, plus the hassle of taking back glass tubes in my luggage was eventually not worth it.
Still, it’s endearing to know that they’re still around, apart from maker projects and overpriced retro hardware.
I have an old (probably '60s) hifi amp. It’s awesome. Replaced the selenium rectifier with silicon, replaced a few caps, and put fresh tubes in it.
It sounds…basically the same as modern solid state stuff to my untrained ear. It’s pretty cool that in a sense we “solved” the problem of amplification back then. Most of the speakers of the day were probably complete crap by today’s standards (unless you had something upscale like a pair of AR-3s), but a well designed amplifier from the era holds up well.
There are also testers in carry-cases.
And there are companies that sell tube amp kits with very detailed instructions, some based on the Dynaco specs and designs from the 50s-70s. Repro parts are still made. Dynaco sold Dynakits back then.
The tubes are mostly Chinese or Russian made, possibly some in Ukraine.
Thing to remember is they run very high voltages and they can self destruct when one’s back is turned.
This vendor has been around for decades and has a supporr forum… http://tubes4hifi.com/
That’s so cool
I remember using these. You didn’t have to write down which tubes went where because the store had a sheet of stickers in number pairs, one for the tube, and the matching sticker for the socket.