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  2. Tube socket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tube_socket

    When tube equipment was common, retailers such as drug stores had vacuum tube testers, and sold replacement tubes. Some Nixie tubes were also designed to use sockets. Throughout the tube era, as technology developed, sometimes differently in different parts of the world, many tube bases and sockets came into use.

  3. List of vacuum tubes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_vacuum_tubes

    One system prefixes a three-digit number with the letters "VT", presumably meaning "Vacuum Tube". Other systems prefix the number with the letters "JHS" or "JAN". The numbers following these prefixes can be "special" four-digit numbers, or domestic two- or three-digit numbers or simply the domestic North American "RETMA" numbering system.

  4. Parts kit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parts_kit

    A parts kit is a collection of weapon (notably firearm) parts that, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), "is designed to or may be readily be assembled, completed, converted, or restored to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive."

  5. IEC 60309 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEC_60309

    "Plugs, socket-outlets and couplers for industrial purposes" specifies general functional and safety requirements. [4] IEC 60309-2 "Dimensional interchangeability requirements for pin and contact-tube accessories" applies to plugs and socket-outlets, cable couplers and appliance couplers with pins and contact tubes of standardized configurations.

  6. Mullard–Philips tube designation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullard–Philips_tube...

    European tube manufacturers agreed on the system, but in the UK, MOV (Marconi-Osram Valve), STC/Brimar and Mazda/Ediswan maintained their own systems. Most MOV tubes were cross-licensed copies of RCA types, with a British designation. For example, an MOV X63 valve was the same as an RCA 6A8 tube.

  7. Nuvistor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuvistor

    RCA 6DS4 "Nuvistor" triode vacuum tube, ca. 20 mm high and 11 mm in diameter Nuvistor with U.S. dime for scale. The nuvistor is a type of vacuum tube announced by RCA in 1959. . Nuvistors were made to compete with the then-new bipolar junction transistors, and were much smaller than conventional tubes of the day, almost approaching the compactness of early discrete transistor casi

  8. 6V6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/6V6

    These tubes have very similar characteristics to the 6V6, but differ either in the heater rating, or use a different socket and pin-out 5V6GT - Same as the 6V6GT, but with different heater ratings - 4.7V, 0.6A, controlled 11 sec. warm-up time.

  9. Modular connector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_connector

    The first types of small modular telephone connectors were created by AT&T in the mid-1960s for the plug-in handset and line cords of the Trimline telephone. [1] Driven by demand for multiple sets in residences with various lengths of cords, the Bell System introduced customer-connectable part kits and telephones, sold through PhoneCenter stores in the early 1970s. [2]