Neon lamp in green glass
This produces a sox like yellow light. Not what i expected. Made myself.

Neon lamp in green glass

This produces a sox like yellow light. Not what i expected. Made myself.

IMG_20170221_211900.jpg IMG_20170222_183931.jpg IMG_20170316_220205.jpg IMG_20170416_175701.jpg IMG_20170425_210738.jpg
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Filename:IMG_20170316_220205.jpg
Album name:eclipsislamps / Cold cathode and other special lamps
Filesize:2185 KiB
Date added:16 Mar, 2017
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James   [17 Mar, 2017 at 11:40 AM]
Very unique! Always satisfying to make your own creations and see the result. Where do you manage to get natural green glass from these days? Is there still stock available from Plowden & Thomson, or you made your own tubing eg from a redrawn wine bottle? I once made some really nice blue glass tubing that way from drawing down the neck of an old blue glass sherry bottle.

NB a small tip for your glass tipoff: this is likely to crack, due to the sharp internal angle where the two sucked-in sides of glass meet. Use a single-jet burner to melt a small bead on the end, with plenty of oxygen in the flame otherwise the iron (III) oxide will come out of the glass and produce a brown coating like on your pinch. Then anneal well at the junction of the bead with the tube. Such kind of tips will last longer with reduced risk of leaking one day.
eclipsislamps   [17 Mar, 2017 at 11:14 PM]
The green glass was from a neon sign shop, it had green phosphor on but I removed it.

I have also been attempting hot cathode lamps but failed every time. Hoping you can help me here with your expertise, but i have been chopping the ends off fluorescent tubes and welding them to fresh unused phosphored neon sign glass, connecting to the vacuum pump then getting the air and moisture out the glass by heating it to 270c, then I filled the tube with 10mbar of argon, heated the fillaments on a variable bench supply to yellow hot for 5 seconds (they arced over but not destructively because its current limited) then flushing it a few times with argon then dropping the mercury in and sealing off. I then connected it to a switch start circuit and it starts straight away and runs bright, then suddenly after about 30 seconds of running it goes rapidly contaminated from the cathodes, normally very badly making it fit for only the bin.

Any idea what I'm doing wrong? It works fine when I do this with cold cathodes, even ones I constructed myself and they come out wonderfully and remain clean, its just hot cathodes that seem to do this.

Regarding the discoloration on the glass, im just using a pair of basic butane blowtorches facing each other, I don't have any fancy pure oxygen fueled burners of a forced air one or the money to obtain them unfortunately.

Thanks for the info regarding the glasswork though, information on it online is thin at best so ive had to work out how to do it myself thus far.
FrontSideBus   [18 Mar, 2017 at 02:39 PM]
Interesting!
XmasLightGuy   [19 Apr, 2017 at 02:03 AM]
Neat. Cool
In the thumbnail it looked sorta like small Christmas lightbulb

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