Test Equipment

Electrostatic CRT Tester — Mark 2

Owned (DIY-built) · Active deep-dive target CRT testers — Electrostatic-deflection/-focus CRT tester (open-source DIY kit) Modern DIY (open-source kit, sgitheach.org.uk; tests tube-era CRTs from the 1930s onward)

Overview

The Electrostatic CRT Tester — Mark 2 is a simple, manually-operated bench instrument for testing electrostatic-deflection, electrostatic-focus cathode ray tubes — the small round-face scope, radar, and indicator CRTs (DG7/32, 2BP1, 5SP7, CV-series, Russian ЛO-series, etc.) that have no proper datasheet or dedicated tester. It supplies every electrode a CRT needs from a single 12 V DC bench supply: a current-limited heater (~6 W), an adjustable control-grid bias (−5 V to −120 V), a wide-range focus supply, a flyback-derived acceleration anode up to ~+2.2 kV and a post-deflection-acceleration (PDA) supply up to ~+5.6 kV, and ±300 V push-pull deflection with AC-coupled X/Y and grid-modulation (Z) inputs — all set by hand with potentiometers and jumpers, "no micro-controller or PC in sight." It is an open design by the maker at sgitheach.org.uk, released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0, sold as bare-PCB, complete-electronics, and case kits. Beyond CRTs it also lights and characterises cold-cathode neon devices (dekatrons, Nixies, trigger tubes, bargraphs), magic-eye valves, the E1T beam-switching tube, NIMO tubes, and Geissler tubes.

Context

Electrostatic CRTs — the small round-face tubes used in oscilloscopes, radar indicators, and instrument displays before magnetic-deflection TV tubes took over — are notoriously hard to test: many have no surviving datasheet, they want a fistful of different voltages from a heater rail up to several kilovolts of EHT, and getting any of those wrong risks the phosphor or the gun. Jeff already runs the tube-era bench (the Heathkit TT-1 transconductance tester, the Supreme 385 emission tester, the eTracer/uTracer6 pulsed-HV curve tracers, and the Heathkit IP-32/SP-2717A HV supplies), but none of those brings a CRT to life. This tester fills that gap: a single-box, hand-adjusted supply that lights the heater, biases the gun, focuses and accelerates the beam, and deflects the spot — so an unknown CRT can be sorted good/weak/dead, its parameters measured, and its display driven for evaluation. It also ties into the Television project's mechanical/electrostatic-display work and the dekatron/Nixie material in Electronics — Neon Ring Counters.

Deep dive

  1. Vol 1 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 1: What It Is & When to Reach for It
  2. Vol 2 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 2: How an Electrostatic CRT Works
  3. Vol 3 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 3: History, Lineage & the Open-Source Project
  4. Vol 4 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 4: Inside the Tester — Circuit Theory
  5. Vol 5 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 5: The Build — Kits, PCB, Case & Jeff's Unit
  6. Vol 6 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 6: Operating Procedure & Usage
  7. Vol 7 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 7: The Testable-Device Menagerie
  8. Vol 8 Electrostatic CRT Tester — Vol 8: Cheatsheet, Safety & Where It Sits on the Bench