Calibration and Testing of the Hickok Model 600/600A Tube Testers
Version 4.0, September 2006
Copyright Daniel Schoo
(This is a reproduction of the following document: http://www.radiolaguy.com/PDF_Files/Hickok600-600Acalibration.pdf,
with minor modifications.)
Use this procedure to test and calibrate the Hickok Model 600/600A
mutual conductance (AKA transconductance) tube testers. Except as
noted, all of the readings are taken with a 1000 ohms per volt
meter. If an accurate 1000 ohms per volt meter is not available a
modern high impedance analog or digital voltmeter can be used with
appropriate shunt resistors in parallel with the input to simulate
proper loading. The following resistor values should be used: 10
volt scale use 10K, 50 volt scale use 51K, 250 volt scale use
250K. All resistors are 1/2 watt 5% carbon composition.
Calibration will be easier if you supply AC power through a
constant voltage regulation type transformer to do the tests, but
this is not essential. Recalibrate the tester any time either
rectifier tube is replaced. The correct type #81 fuse lamp must
be installed in the tester or false readings can result. For the
identification and location of adjustments and for troubleshooting
refer to the ADJUSTMENT CHART immediately following the test
sequence.
It is assumed that the person performing the testing and
adjustment is knowledgeable in electronic service and aware of the
dangers in working on equipment using high voltages. Do not
attempt to service equipment if you are not experienced in such
work. Serious shock or death could result in improper action or
procedure.
- PREPARATION
- Remove all of the screws around the outside of the panel that
hold the tester to the case. Remove the tester from the case and
set it up on spacers so that the front panel is facing up in the
normal operating position. Before applying power adjust the
mechanical zero on the meter to set the pointer exactly at the
zero line on the scale. Turn on the tester and allow it to warm
up for 5 minutes. Set the tester programming switches to these
settings: 6.3 JR-5347-2 0 0. Set the SHORTS switch
to the TUBE TEST position. Do not insert any tubes
in the test sockets.
- LINE ADJUST
- 1. Push switch P7 and rotate the LINE ADJUST
until the meter points directly to the LINE TEST
mark in the center of the meter scale. Release P7.
- ENGLISH POSITION
- 2. Rotate the ENGLISH control fully counter
clockwise and verify that the pointer lines up with the 0 mark on
the scale.
- BIAS POSITION
- 3. Rotate the BIAS control fully counter
clockwise and verify that the pointer lines up with the 0 mark on
the scale.
- SHORTS TEST
- 4. Connect a 220K resistor between pins 8 and 5 on the octal
socket. Set the SHORTS switch to position 2. The
neon SHORTS lamp should glow. Return
the SHORTS switch to the TUBE TEST
position.
- FILAMENT VOLTAGE TEST
- 5. Connect an AC voltmeter to pins 2 and 7 of the octal
socket. While observing the reading on the meter, rotate the
FILAMENT switch from the minimum through the
maximum voltage positions and verify that the voltage agrees with
the setting. The readings should be within plus or minus 10% of
nominal. Return the FILAMENT switch to the 6.3
volt position.
- PLATE VOLTAGE TEST
- 6. Connect the negative lead of a DC voltmeter to pin 8 of the
octal socket. Connect the positive lead to pin 3. Push the
P4 GM button and read the voltage. Normal plate
voltage is 150 volts plus or minus 5 volts. Release P4.
- SCREEN VOLTAGE TEST
- 7. Move the positive lead of the DC voltmeter to pin 4 of the
octal socket. Push P4 and read the screen voltage. Normal is 130
volts plus or minus 5 volts. Release P4.
- REDUCED SCREEN VOLTAGE TEST (Later versions only, earlier
versions do not have this.)
- 8. Hold P4 and press P1. The reading should drop to 56 volts
plus or minus 3 volts. Release P1 and P4.
- GRID BIAS VOLTAGE
- 9. Connect the negative lead of a high impedance DC voltmeter
to pin 8. Connect the positive lead to pin 5. Do not use a
compensating shunt resistor for this test. Adjust
the BIAS control fully clockwise. Verify that the
maximum voltage is –39 volts plus or minus 1 volt. Set
the BIAS control to 22. Verify that the reading is
–3 volts plus or minus 0.2 volt.
- GRID SIGNAL VOLTAGE TEST
- 10. Set the BIAS control to zero. Connect a
high impedance AC voltmeter to pins 8 and 5 and measure the grid
signal voltage. Do not use a compensating shunt resistor for this
test. The AC grid signal voltage should be either 5.0 volts AC
plus or minus 0.250 volts or 2.5 volts AC plus or minus 0.125
volts depending on the age and production run of your tester.
Older versions used 5 volts while later versions used 2.5 volts.
- PLATE SUPPLY BALANCE TEST
- 11. Connect an AC coupled oscilloscope to pin 3 of the octal
socket. Use pin 8 as a common for the scope. Press P4. Observe
the plate voltage and obtain a display on the scope that shows the
rounded peaks of the 120 Hz pulsating DC with as high a gain
as possible. Set the vertical position on the scope to move the
trace downward as you adjust the gain upward to maintain the top
of the trace on the screen. Verify that the alternating peaks of
120 Hz DC are of equal amplitude. Release P4.
- SCREEN SUPPLY BALANCE TEST
- 12. Remove AC power from the tester. Connect the scope probe
ground lead to the center tap of the power transformer winding for
the 5Y3 plates. Connect the scope probe to the center tap of the
power transformer winding for the 5Y3 rectifier filament and
reapply AC power. Adjust the scope as before to display the
120 Hz peaks, and observe the screen bias voltage. Verify
that the alternating peaks of 120 Hz DC are of equal
amplitude. Remove AC power and disconnect the scope. Reapply AC
power for the next test.
- METER BRIDGE BALANCE
- 13. Connect a 10K 10 watt 1% resistor between pins 3 and 8 of
the octal socket. Set the ENGLISH control to zero
then rotate it clockwise to the orange dot near number 73, which
is the 3000 micromho scale setting. Press P4 and observe the
meter reading. Verify that the meter reads zero or no more than
one small division high or low. Rotate the control from end to
end to see if the balance changes positive and/or negative with
control rotation. Release P4 and remove the resistor.
- MUTUAL CONDUCTANCE READING TEST
- 14. Verify that the panel switches are set up to the
conditions as given in PREPARATION at the beginning of this
section (JR 5347-2, FILAMENT at 6.3 volts). Set
the BIAS and the
ENGLISH controls to zero. Rotate
the ENGLISH control clockwise to the orange dot
near number 73. For the following mutual conductance test you
will need to set up an isolated current limited source of AC
voltage. Use the setup drawing in Figure 1 to connect the
equipment to the tester. Be careful because improper connection
can cause serious damage. Connect the source to pins 8 and 3 of
the octal socket. If the main meter deflects downward instead of
up when you perform the test, swap the connections to pins 8 and
3. Measure the voltage source directly across the secondary of
the isolation transformer. Do not use a shunt resistor across the
meter.
<FIGURE 1> (Showing an isolated 120 V Variac feeding a
voltmeter, thence feeding Pins 8 & 3 through a 10k 1% 10W
series resistor.)
Push P4 and slowly adjust the voltage source up to exactly 50.0
volts. Observe the reading on the tester meter. The correct
reading is 2000 micromhos plus or minus one small division on the
3000 scale. It may be slightly worse depending on the quality of
the ENGLISH control. After taking the reading set
the voltage back to zero and release P4.
- DIODE/RECTIFIER TESTS:
- 15A. Verify that the panel switches are set up to the
conditions as given in PREPARATION at the beginning of this
section (JR 5347-2 FILAMENT at 6.3 volts). Set
the BIAS and the ENGLISH controls to
zero. Connect a 1K 1% 10 watt resistor to the anode lead of a
1N4005 silicon rectifier. Connect the cathode of the rectifier to
pin 8 of the octal socket. Connect the other lead of the resistor
to pin 3 of the octal socket. Adjust the
ENGLISH control to 86. Press the
P1 DIODE test button. Verify that the meter reads
at or slightly above the DIODES OK line on the
meter. Release P1.
15B. Adjust the ENGLISH control to 53. Press
the P3 RECTIFIER test button. Verify that the
meter reads at or slightly above the DIODES OK line
on the meter. Note: For actual rectifier tube tests
the REPLACE ? GOOD scale is read for the test
results. Release P3.
15C. Replace the 1K resistor with a 10K 1% 10 watt resistor.
Adjust the ENGLISH control to 46. Press
the P2 0Z4 test button. Verify that the meter
reads at or slightly above the
DIODES OK line on the meter. Note: For actual 0Z4
rectifier tube tests the REPLACE ? GOOD scale is
read for the test results. Release P2.
- GAS TEST
- 16. Obtain a 6L6 tube that is known to be free of gas. Put
the tube in the tester and set it up for the standard 6L6 test.
Set the ENGLISH control to 73. Press P5,
the GAS 1 test button. Adjust
the BIAS control for a reading of 100 on the 3000
scale. Hold P5 and press P6, the GAS 2 test
button and verify that the reading moves up by less than one small
division. Release P6 and P5. Connect a 1Meg resistor between pin
5 and pin 7 of the nine pin miniature socket. Repeat the
test. This time verify that the reading goes up by 4 to 5 small
divisions on the meter when the P6 button is pushed. Release P6
and P5.
This completes the testing and calibration procedure. For
adjustments and problem resolution refer to the ADJUSTMENT CHART
section below.
ADJUSTMENT CHART
-
- LINE ADJUST:
- 1. The 150 volt plate supply is used as the
reference when setting the AC line voltage adjustment. The AC
line control is adjusted until the plate voltage is 150 volts as
read on the meter. All of the other operating voltages follow
along and are assumed to be correct. If the plate supply is
abnormally high or low then adjusting it to the nominal 150 volts
with the line test will cause all of the other operating voltages
to be shifted. This is because the line adjust will be
compensating for an abnormal plate supply and also affecting every
other operating voltage. If the plate supply voltage is normal
and all of the other voltages are wrong by the same percentage,
look at the plate supply for problems. If the AC line test
circuit itself is bad the plate and other voltages will all be
wrong. If the plate and other voltages are not correct after
setting the AC line adjustment, check the resistors in the AC
voltage metering circuit R24 and R25. Also check the meter
movement and verify that it indicates full scale when passing the
nominal full scale current. Older testers used a 1.4 milliamp
movement with 80 ohms of resistance. Later versions were 500
microamps and 233 ohms of resistance. Other values may have been
used as production changes were made through the years. The metal
plate mounted on the side of the meter is a factory applied
magnetic shunt. By loosening the mounting screw and sliding the
plate back and forth, small adjustments can be made to the full
scale deflection of the meter. Bear in mind though that changing
the meter adjustment will effect the mutual conductance reading
too so rule out everything else before adjusting the meter.
- ENGLISH POSITION:
- 2. Loosen the set screw on the knob and
reposition the knob to the correct location. Retighten the set
screw.
- BIAS POSITION:
- 3. Loosen the set screw on the knob and
reposition the knob to the correct location. Retighten the set
screw.
- SHORTS TEST:
- 4. R28 sets the shorts test sensitivity. If
adjustment is necessary set R28 fully counterclockwise and slowly
rotate it clockwise until the short lamp just begins to glow. R28
is the slotted screwdriver adjustment mounted on the back of the
transformer/terminal board assembly.
- FILAMENT VOLTAGE TEST:
- 5. No adjustment. This voltage is
entirely dependent on the power transformer and the AC line
setting. See also ADJUSTMENT CHART 1, LINE ADJUST above. Some
voltages may be slightly higher due to the transformer having no
load.
- PLATE VOLTAGE TEST:
- 6. No adjustment. This voltage is
entirely dependent on the power transformer and the AC line
setting. See also ADJUSTMENT CHART 1, LINE ADJUST above. If the AC
line test circuit is reading correctly, check and/or replace the
type 83 rectifier tube.
- SCREEN VOLTAGE TEST:
- 7. No adjustment. This voltage is
entirely dependent on the power transformer and the AC line
setting. See also ADJUSTMENT CHART 1, LINE ADJUST above. If the AC
line test circuit is reading correctly, check and/or replace the
type 5Y3 rectifier tube.
- REDUCED SCREEN AND GRID BIAS VOLTAGE ADJUSTMENTS:
- 8.
Earlier versions of the 600 do not have the provision to reduce
the screen voltage. Pressing P1 will have no effect on the screen
voltage. For later versions the 56 volt reduced (P4 and P1 pushed)
screen grid voltage measured in Step 8 and the –39 volt
control grid bias voltage measured in Step 9 is set by adjustment
of the two taps on R6. If adjustments are necessary to either the
reduced screen voltage or the grid bias voltage, adjust the
control grid voltage first because that affects the reduced screen
grid voltage also. Before doing any adjustments always verify
that the screen supply voltage is 130 volts. Adjust the AC line
control until it is.
In both versions of the 600/600A the grid bias is controlled by
the series combination of R6, a tapped power resistor, and R7, the
front panel BIAS adjust control. Remove the tester
from the case and prop it up on a work surface face down such that
you can reach and push the control panel buttons P4 and P1. Set
it up with the top edge of the control panel facing you and the
panel meter to the right.
To set the grid bias voltage, adjust the BIAS
control fully clockwise. Loosen the clamp screw of the sliding
tap on resistor R6. This is the tap with the jumper wire to the
end tab on R6. Gently hold the tap with insulated pliers and
slide the tap until the voltage is as close to –39 volts as
you can get it. Tighten the screw to secure the tap in place.
Don't over tighten the screw. Only enough pressure to keep the
tap from sliding is sufficient.
On later versions to set the reduced screen voltage perform Test
8. Loosen the clamp screw of the second sliding tap on resistor
R6. This is the tap that is not connected to the end tab of R6.
Gently hold the tap with insulated pliers and slide the tap until
the voltage is as close to 56 volts as you can get it. Tighten
the screw to secure the tap in place.
There is some interaction between the two adjustments so repeat
Tests 8 and 9 and adjust as necessary to get both voltages within
their limits.
- GRID BIAS VOLTAGE:
- 9. See Step 8 above.
- GRID SIGNAL VOLTAGE TEST:
- 10. No adjustment is possible
for this voltage. The voltage is entirely dependent on the power
transformer and the AC line setting. Make sure that the AC line
setting is correct and that the AC line set function is working
properly.
- PLATE SUPPLY BALANCE TEST:
- 11. This is entirely dependent
on the power transformer and the rectifier tubes. If balance is
incorrect replace the 83 tube.
- SCREEN SUPPLY BALANCE TEST:
- 12. This is entirely dependent
on the power transformer and the rectifier tubes. If balance is
incorrect replace the 5Y3 tube.
- METER BRIDGE BALANCE:
- 13. The meter bridge balance is
determined by the relative positions of the upper and lower halves
of the ENGLISH control. The ENGLISH
control is designed so that the two halves form the two legs of a
balanced bridge circuit. As the control is turned clockwise the
two halves decrease in resistance by the same amount thereby
decreasing the sensitivity of the bridge so that higher
transconductance readings are displayed without over scaling the
meter. The resistance of both halves of the control must track
each other as they are rotated or the bridge will become
unbalanced, adding or subtracting a constant number from the
correct reading. If the power supply is properly balanced and the
meter does not read zero or close to it with this test,
the ENGLISH control is not balanced. If the
control becomes dirty and intermittent the resistance will change
abruptly and deviate from normal as it is rotated causing the zero
to fluctuate or jump adding error. Because these are not high
precision controls some fluctuation is always going to be seen as
they are moved through the full span of rotation, especially at
the end points and sometimes when the direction of rotation is
changed. If the total fluctuation is on the order of four or more
small divisions on the meter and cleaning doesn't help, the only
solution is to replace the control. To clean a dirty control,
follow the Control Cleaning instructions given below. If the
ENGLISH control is not balanced it will have to be
adjusted. While proper balance is vital to the accuracy of
measurement, calibration is done by adjustment of the control
under Control Alignment described below in the MUTUAL CONDUCTANCE
CALIBRATION section.
- Control Cleaning:
- If the ENGLISH control is dirty or intermittent
it is best to remove it from the tester to clean both sections. If
you are not experienced in taking apart controls do not use this
as a learning opportunity. It is fairly easy to ruin one and there
are no replacements other than salvage from a junk tester. Set the
control to the center of rotation before working on it. Do not
rotate the shaft more than a short distance while the halves are
separated. On older controls that do not completely separate, if
you rotate past the stop you can drop the front wiper into the
slot between the ends of the element and it will be difficult to
get back out.
The back cover is press-fit onto the end of the back section shell
and can be removed by prying it off. On the older controls you
cannot completely separate the front section from the back. To
separate them enough for cleaning, remove the retaining ring
around the shaft where it enters the front section then melt the
solder spot and gently pull the shell apart only far enough to
keep the solder from holding the two halves together when it cools
and no farther. Once the shell sections are separated remove the
solder from the surfaces. Gently separate the front section shell
from the cover just enough to provide an opening to infuse an
appropriate cleaning solution. A couple of toothpicks placed in
the gap will hold the halves separated for cleaning. Never attempt
to pull them farther apart as this will bend and destroy the front
section wiper components.
On newer controls the front section comes completely apart by
removing the retaining ring from the shaft and sliding the shaft
out the back of the shell after it has been separated. The wiper
and center tab can be removed and cleaned. The back section
cannot be disassembled as the front section but there is enough
exposed to do a cleaning.
The main problem is not the wirewound element or the slider on the
wiper but the sliding contact between the wiper and the center lug
of the control. Old dried out grease, dust and tarnish on the
contacts that connect the center tab to the wiper are the main
problems. A good cleaning method is to immerse the control in an
ultrasonic cleaner for a few minutes using a detergent solution in
water. Afterward, give it a good rinse with clean water and then a
second rinse with a mild water soluble solvent such as isopropyl
alcohol to purge the water. Follow up with an air dry. After
cleaning reassemble the control but do not reapply the solder to
the shell. Do a control alignment as described below in the
Control Alignment section under MUTUAL CONDUCTANCE CALIBRATION.
- MUTUAL CONDUCTANCE CALIBRATION:
- 14. The mutual conductance
reading in this test is controlled by the setting of
the ENGLISH control and the accuracy of the
meter. Check the meter accuracy as described above in ADJUSTMENT
CHART Step 1. A bad or dirty ENGLISH control will
cause the readings to be wrong. If necessary, cleaning
the ENGLISH control as described above in Control
Cleaning should always be done before adjusting the mutual
conductance calibration. If the readings are incorrect follow the
Control Alignment procedure below to adjust the control to the
proper calibration.
A difference of one or two small divisions might be seen if you
rotate the control and set it to the orange dot by rotating it
counterclockwise instead of clockwise. This is because
the ENGLISH control is not a precision device nor
was it ever intended to be. It has a certain amount of inaccuracy
in the resistance and instability in the mechanical motion. This
is about the best you can do with an instrument of this age and
caliber.
- Control Alignment:
- Remove the tester from the case. Remove
the ENGLISH control from the tester. Note the small
spot of solder on the side of the shell of
the ENGLISH control. Remove the solder so that the
shell of the back resistor section can rotate with respect to the
front section. Block the tester up on a level surface with the
front panel facing up. The top edge of the control panel should be
facing you so that you can see the meter and push the buttons.
Temporarily connect the ENGLISH control to the
tester with clip leads and place it in a convenient position such
that you can hold it and adjust it. Verify that the AC line
adjustment is correct. Rotate the ENGLISH control
fully counterclockwise. Put the ENGLISH knob on
the control and rotate the knob without rotating the shaft to
align the zero setting to some convenient landmark. Tighten the
set screw on the knob and, using the landmark, rotate the control
to the orange dot near number 73. Connect the calibration test
circuit and perform the mutual conductance reading test. Secure
switch P4 down and while holding the back section of the control
stationary, rotate the shell of the front section until the meter
reads 2000 on the 3000 scale. Once that is achieved, remove power
and carefully tape the shell to prevent it from rotating. Perform
the test once more and verify that the knob didn't move and the
shell didn't slip before it was secured with the tape. Reapply
just a little solder spot to the shell to permanently secure the
shell in place and re-install the control in the tester. After
reassembly do a final re-test. Be careful when you do this
adjustment because of the dangerous voltages in close proximity.
Wear insulated gloves and understand exactly what you are going to
do before you start.
- DIODE/RECTIFIER TESTS:
- 15. The diode and rectifier tests
assess the voltage drop across the rectifier by applying a fixed
voltage with a series limiting resistor and measuring the
available plate current. If the readings are not correct for any
of the P1, P2 or P3 tests check resistors R9 / 12 ohms, R2 / 1.2K,
R1 / 1.8K, R16 / 200 ohms. The sensitivity of the meter and the
accuracy of the ENGLISH control also affect this
test.
- GAS TEST:
- 16. The gas testing circuits depend on the meter
bridge, ENGLISH and BIAS controls.
If the mutual conductance tests are functioning properly, check
for bad switches or dirty contacts on P5 and P6. Also check R8 /
180K resistor. This resistor is placed in series with the grid
for the gas test when P6 is pressed. Any grid current due to gas
will cause a voltage drop across R8. The plate current goes up as
the grid bias drops indicating gas in the tube.
NOTES
Always test the two rectifier tubes first if trouble is
suspected. Check for out of tolerance resistors, inaccurate meter
movements, dirty switch contacts, dirty ENGLISH
control or a bad transformer. The type of measuring instruments
used or other factors not related to the tester itself can give
readings that appear to be a little out of specification. Some of
the important factors are the DC operating voltages, power supply
balance and the AC grid signal voltage.
The mutual conductance measurement circuit assumes a correct AC
grid signal voltage. If the AC grid signal voltage is wrong, the
displayed mutual conductance reading will be wrong by the same
amount of error even though the DC voltages and mutual conductance
measurement circuit are calibrated correctly. Hickok did not
provide a means for adjusting or regulating this voltage, relying
on the transformer winding to be pretty close to the right
value. The AC signal voltage will change depending on things like
the setting of the bias control, heater load and plate current
but, for the purpose the tester was intended, this is good
enough. Hickok knew these things and compensated the roll chart
numbers to provide adequate test results. The cutoff point where a
tube is judged good or bad is rather arbitrary and subjective
depending on the application so some error is not all that
important. Hickok testers are not designed to measure the absolute
quality of a tube but to discern the probable good from the
probable bad in connection with service work.
There are several points to consider on the replacement of the
vacuum tube rectifiers with solid state devices or other design
changes. Hickok made a lot of assumptions and clever design
tradeoffs to manufacture an instrument that worked well but was
not overly complicated or expensive. Calibration constants of the
tester are very much dependent on certain conditions remaining in
place such as voltage drops due to the rectifier heater current
consumption and the effect of plate resistance voltage drops in
the rectifiers. Any circuit modifications including substitution
of the rectifiers with anything but the original types will
compromise the accuracy and should be avoided.
The component designation numbers given refer to the parts listed
in the Hickok schematic diagram included with the operators manual
for the model 600A. Hickok revised and changed the 600 and 600A
several times during the manufacturing life of the instrument.
Some deviation is to be expected from unit to unit depending on
the year of manufacture. These calibration guidelines serve as a
model for a general outline on calibration. Individual testers
may vary as to the physical layout or other details. All of the
Hickok mutual conductance testers use the same basic circuit with
small variations. Many of the other models, especially the small
service type testers can be checked using the same voltage
specifications. Significant variations in the AC grid signal
voltage might be found in earlier testers. Earlier testers used
5.0 volts AC rather than the 2.5 volts used later. Other model
testers used a selection of AC grid signal voltages depending on
the meter range selected.
Hickok is a registered trademark of the Hickok Electrical
Instrument Company, Cleveland Ohio.
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