By all means, carry on.
Unfortunately I don’t have photos of the Perq I used to have, or the Bitgraph, for that matter...
Corran, these are lovely. Thanks for sharing them with us.
"Never try to teach a pig to sing. It wastes your time and annoys the pig."
seezee at Mercury Photo Bureau
seezee on Flickr
seezee's day-job at Messenger Web Design
Pali and seezee, thanks!
The above convo is way over my head...that stuff is before my time, literally .
I dug into my stuff and found a stash of interesting electron tubes, including a bunch in their original boxes! Played around tonight setting up a still life with a few of my favorite tubes. The small ones on the lower right are audio tubes (12AX7 or 12AT7) that sometimes are worth decent money. I don't know what the huge one in the back was for, but probably a big TV. Shot this with my Speedotron head w/ umbrella and a big white foamcore board on the left. It's a little dark but I want the background to be close to flat black - honestly I am not very well practiced for this kind of photo so I'm learning/practicing here. Maybe I'll flip the backdrop to white to better see the inside of the tubes.
Bryan, I knew you would get there. Power the tubes up, they glow nicely. This week I was trying to shoot the inside of my 50's Magnavox tube radio. Kinda boring as most of the tubes are inside metal shielding sleeves. I will try again as soon I find my Multi Band Grundig tube radio with Shortwave. It's still packed...Then I need to setup a long wire antenna.
My Atomic Bomb image took some fiddling. The 15-watt incandescent bulb was too bright to get any inside detail. I put a solid state Variac on it and went as low as it would go. It was very dim and zee film was very sensitive. Great fun in the winter studio.
It's called the 'pinout' a diagram of each pin function. I figure as a musician you have used tube amps.
Start here. http://diyaudioprojects.com/Tubes/300B-SET-Amplifier/
Thanks Randy. Actually I haven't used any tube amps but I have owned/used tube microphones. I've also wired up solid-state mics using a pinout but I wasn't sure what I was looking at wrt a tube. After reading around a bit I figured out what I'm looking for is just the "heater." Being mostly ignorant on how the tube functions, I didn't realize that is what the filament was referred to as on the pinout. Now to go find some wire .
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