• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

VR tube dumb question

Long ago I had a transmitter that had wonderful glowing VR tubes and mercury vapor diodes 😎

I'll pass on the mercury rectifiers, but I would love to have some VR tubes on my next build. is there a practical use for them now? I would feel silly just wiring them up as light bulbs.
 
You can use them across the B+ to ground to regulate voltage. I am using two OC3 tubes in series to give me 210V regulated. There also OA3 = 75V and OD3 = 150V.
https://frank.pocnet.net/sheets/137/0/0B3.pdf

They do add some novelty.
 

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Or build an amplifier small enough that you can regulate the B+ supply with one. ....this is a working headphone amp with output transformers, Constant Current source plate loads and Rod Coleman filament regulators 😀
 

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A very practical use of gas discharge regulators is in a full pentode mode PP amp employing Russian 6Π15Π "finals". A 0A2 in each channel locks O/P tube g2 voltage at a safe level, while maximizing open loop linearity.

Sockets correctly wired for the 6Π15Π (6p15p) accept EL84s without incident. The key electrical difference between the 6Π15Π and the EL84 lies in g2 toughness. In the 6Π15Π, g2 is fragile. As is often the case with Russian types, specimens bearing the EB (ev) suffix rate to be superior.
 
Two VR150s in series does a great job of regulating the screen grid voltage for a 6L6 or 807 based amplifier. I suppose you could use them with the 6550 too if you wanted.

Regulating the screens of a pentode or beam power tube amplifier is a great way to improve performance. All it takes is some chassis real estate and sockets, the tubes are quite cheap.
 
A well-known trick to minimize the strike voltage of two series-connected tubes is to connect a large resistor in parallel with one of them. The one without a resistor then strikes first, at its own strike voltage, and the one with a resistor strikes at its strike voltage plus the maintaining voltage of the other one.

By the way, they also have an ignition delay, especially when they have no radioactive primer and are used in darkness.