These Solar Converters are only a small diversion in the larger project of experimenting with vacuum tube devices at home. To that end, I'm already in the process of building a high vacuum system that will be more than capable of pulling these tubes down to the levels of vacuum required to work. I'm also putting together the glass-working tools that will be needed to fabricate the envelopes and feedthroughs. I thought it would be nice to post some pictures of my growing stack of vacuum equipment here!
![](https://cdn.hackaday.io/images/1940071650917024704.jpg)
Here you can see my gauge controller and a number of vacuum gauges: two Edwards Pirani gauge heads and a Duniway Stockroom ion gauge. I've also put together a bunch of vacuum plumbing, although like any good plumbing project, I'm still missing some fittings. In the lower left, you can get a small peek of the mechanical vacuum pump that I planned to use. Unfortunately, even though it was sold to me as possibly being a Pfeiffer MVP series pump, it appears to be a Vacuubrand MZ, which I might get away with because of my choice of turbo pump (more on that in a second) but I'm also waiting on another pump to arrive which should reach much more convincing levels of backing pressure.
![](https://cdn.hackaday.io/images/9963101650917309531.jpg)
The big succboy is an Edwards EX255H compound pump which was pulled from a working mass spectrometer. It came with the controller, so I just need to provide it with 24V and it will do the rest. It has all of the modern self-protection features and tolerates a continuous working foreline pressure up to 5 mbar(!) although I hope to be able to achieve better than that.
I'll post another project log when we achieve first pump-down. Right now the main hold-up is an ISO-K 100 to KF16 reducer that I had to order from China. In the meantime, I'll be sorting out my roughing pump and plumbing.
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