It's a Spectra Physics model 907! Various tags on the assemblies indicate it was putting out about 31-32mW when I acquired it. I never measured the power myself. No power meter.
The getter is suspect, but in the dark the tube does blink that familiar pink glow when the PS tries to start it shortly after initial poweron. Some pulses only go about a foot from the anode. The third or fourth one usually lights the entire capillary but doesn't catch. Then it goes dark for a while, but the process typically repeats after a 5-10 second interval. I have not left the PS energized for more than 90 seconds at a stretch or so. I can hear some very faint ticking sometimes during the starting attempts. I have not yet tried to clean the tube or the frame, but plan to wipe the tube down with some alcohol and cotton balls. I have a vague memory of something power-supply-related occurring on a bench somewhere and things becoming iffy after that, but that could just be wishful thinking. The ground wire may have come loose and then brushed the frame, arcing slightly. Unsure why a ground wire would arc in those circumstances, but that's the memory, faulty as it may be.
There are heavy rubber boots around the glass tube holding the ballast resistors. I'm afraid if I cut them off to clean them I won't have anything to replace them with. Whatever sealant they used to glue the boots on is a dark, crusty affair now. The ballast resistors are 27Kohms each, and there are three.
The PS that came with it is marked 5000 VDC at 11-12mA. The PS part number is 900880059. It's a solid black potted brick type. ("My God... it's full of electrons!")
Pulling the Alden connector apart immediately after unplugging the power supply results in a bright blue and audible spark across the pins of the tube side of the plug. At least there is some significant capacitance there...
There are some dark brown patches aligned with the magnet pattern near the anode end of the tube.
I'm hopeful that this may just be a hard-to-start tube that needs cleaning, maybe some ballast resistor work, and a new PS.
Does anyone coming to SELEM have a HeNe power supply suitable to drive this tube?
Best,
Mike
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I found this page on cleaning and alignment of this laser, but I am not about to attempt brewster or mirror cleaning:
http://donklipstein.com/laserhtr.htm#htr907ca
Sounds dead to me. The brown stains in the tube, and crusty ballast seals indicate lots of use. Clean it up and hang it on the wall!![]()
I concur with Bob if the getter is no longer silver/black but has turned white of disappeared. The brown bore crud and pink color Vs Salmon sound like end of life tube. The power supply may be OK; have to try with a good head.The ballasts seldom fail unless they crack. I have seen one cathode ballast glowing white hot from a crack...the tube started to flicker and I bet the power supply was hating it...
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Phil Bergeron( AKA 142laser)
Just saw the picture; the tube is bad.
Phil Bergeron( AKA 142laser)
Well, nuts. Can it be refurbished / repumped? I am sad. It was a nice laser. Lovely beam profile.
Cambridge Lasers in Fremont, CA probably has tubes for it.