Exactly. With a meter to measure leakage current, you can start to see it at the microamp level. With only an LED, you are well into the milliamp range before you can start to detect leakage. While that's fine for tubes, more sensitive components like capacitors, can have their insulation damaged with higher current flowing. I also have to wonder how hard it could have been to stop the LED from burning out. Some 1N400X diodes to limit voltage drop and a resistor to limit current from there? It's the same thing we do with the IR LED in an optocoupler, to prevent it from burning out in a fault condition.Definitely more compact and lightweight than mine. We built one based on Rich Measures' design. Uses a neon-sign transformer with appropriate current limiting. And a meter to display leakage current.
Had to go to the Wayback Machine to find it.
https://web.archive.org/web/20121017082937/http://www.somis.org/BVT.html
If Tom's had a current meter as well, I'd like it a lot better than mine.
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Not so Nomad. Check out the datasheet for the old NE-38S here: https://www.mouser.com/datasheet/2/423/NeonLampsRev3-1222934.pdf The specified current to light this neon indicator is only 300 microamps. The 90 volt drop is insignificant when dealing with the high voltage associated with this tester.Ah, if you put a 1 Meg resistor in the circuit, and a neon lamp in parallel with it, you'll see 1 Volt of drop for every millamp of leakage current. Most neons won't ionize and glow below 70, 80 Volts or more. Would make the minimum reading 70 uA. The meter on mine pegs out at 50 uA. The tube tester uses a higher resistance than 1 meg for this test, most likely.
The actual current to light a neon glow lamp doesn't need to be much, so long as you shade it from room light. To make it bright still takes a few milliamps minimum.
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