Actually, you want to use a variable DC powersupply to heat the
tube. I am not sure myself why this often works, but my theory is
that the much higher temperatures causes the cathode and filament to
over-expand. When it cools back down, often the filament has been
pushed just enough away from the cathode to "not short".
The
sencore is used to find out WHAT the problem is to begin with, as well
as life-test the tube. Often a low level cleaning run on the
cathodes will also bring back the full brightness of the tube. I
have both a CR-70 as well as a CR-7000. The main difference is
that the CR-7000 can test all 3 guns at the same time and it's GENTLER
on the cathodes. I used to strip trinitron cathodes with the
CR-70. I had to buy a 7000 after sencore assured me that this
won't occur with this model. And it hasn't. Although I can
still wipe out the tube on the higher settings.
I repair and
calibrate broadcast studio monitors, so still have a need for the
Sencore. Flat panels still cannot be used for color critical
editing, so I have a great niche market. Especially in Los
Angeles.
Anyhow, the point is that tubes are getting VERY
scarce. If you can save the tube, it's fantastic. If all
fails, the tube was bad anyway. But to do nothing......
Personally I'd rather try it first.
So, on a 6.3 volt heater I'd
go up slowly to as much as 11 volts and let it bake for 60
seconds. Then test. Rinse and repeat as needed. Tube
is shot anyway, even if you blow out the filament. Nothing to
loose.
Maybe a 3rd option, and this doesn't work on all
sets.... a filament/cathode isolator. TV shops used to use them
for this. It's a transformer that is wired into the filament
leads to isolate the filament VOLTAGE from the cathode. The
potential remains, but it can't bias the cathode on, so you loose the
green (or red or blue) background.
Well, glad to help, so ask away anytime.
Marc