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Large collection of tubes for sale - London UK
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April 26th 10, 11:19 AM posted to uk.rec.audio
Brian Gaff
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Posts: 637
Large collection of tubes for sale - London UK
Ah, well, you only have to listen to the newer radio 'hams' an americanism
in itself, to hear much the same. I suggest its because a lot of people used
CB and got imported CB mags from the states where 'burners' tended to be
using 'tubes'.
Brian
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"David Looser" wrote in message
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"Brian Gaff" wrote in message
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Now to me, tubes are cathode ray tubes, not valves which the US call
tubes for no apparent reason. A tube would he an open ended thing. Surely
thermionic valve is a description.
Fleming called his thermionic diode a "valve" by analogy with one-way
valves used in hydraulics, and the name stuck, at least in England. De
Forest called his thermionic triode an "audion" and the name failed to
stick, either here or in the US. "Tube" obviously refers to the shape,
though since early valves were bulbous rather than cylindrical one wonders
why the American's didn't call them "globes".
The CRT pre-dates the valve and as far as I know have always been called
"cathode ray tubes" both sides of the Atlantic. Unlike early valves they
always had a cylindrical section, though the screen end was an approximate
sphere in early CRTs.
The question really is, why are displays based on this principal called
tubes and what do the Americans call those?
"Cathode ray tube" is a bit of a mouthful. In England it was often
shortened to "tube". In the US it was shortened to "CRT", as indeed it
often is here.
But the REAL question is, why does a UK based poster posting to a uk
newsgroup choose to call his valves "tubes"?
David.
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