i know this is getting way off the topic, but I don't think anyone has seriously produced vacum tube radio receivers or amplifiers for many years, yet new tubes for the old units are still being made.
i know this is getting way off the topic, but I don't think anyone has seriously produced vacum tube radio receivers or amplifiers for many years, yet new tubes for the old units are still being made.
i know this is getting way off the topic, but I don't think anyone has seriously produced vacum tube radio receivers or amplifiers for many years, yet new tubes for the old units are still being made.
Tube and hybrid units are being made and are quite en vogue--- and have been already for some years. You probably have not been to a "Audiophile" joint for decades, I guess? Record turntables, tube amps, etc. are all still in production and hot stuff and very serious (especially their price tags). What has vanished are the cheap tube amps since they'd still be a whole lot more expensive than transistor/IC based but at the boundless high-end its very much valves, discrete components and esoteric materials. And most of their owners are probably playing LPs (newly pressed) on them....
I heard from Kodak today and a call is scheduled for friday. We'll be tied up all weekend at Book Expo America, but will let all know what I hear when I have the opportunity.
i know this is getting way off the topic, but I don't think anyone has seriously produced vacum tube radio receivers or amplifiers for many years, yet new tubes for the old units are still being made.
As others have stated, tube/valve equipment is at the high end of the hi-fi audio world. Browse through Absolute Sound, Stereophile, Sensible Sound (for more moderately priced gear,) Hi Fi World, and many other audio magazines for a survey. Prices of the high-end gear can be stratospheric, but there are manufacturers of much less expensive gear that are producing quite good products.
And not to keep flailing the hide from a deceased horse, but someone asked about bias ply tires. They are still made. I don't know where but ask anyone who owns or drives a vintage automobile from the 20s or 30s.
And it is not just high end audio that consumes tubes. There is also a large culture of people who collect and lovingly restore to operational status vintage radios and receivers such as the Trasnoceanic short wave receiver my dad had when I was a kid that was from the early 40s.
I spoke with Kodak and here is the quick version of my report:
There is plenty of Azo on hand. No one needs to panic.
A few years ago Paula and I saved Azo from extinction. We didn't do this just to get everyone excited about silver chloride paper and then leave them in the lurch. So we are having silver chloride paper made elsewhere. There will be silver chloride paper available as long as we are around.
Thank you and whoopee!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Everything I do in photography involves the critical link named 'Azo' (or whatever may be like it). Thank you, thank you.