Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 14, 2026

Nonode

A nonode is a type of thermionic valve that has nine active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a seven-grid vacuum tube, also sometimes called an enneode. An example was the EQ80/UQ80, which was used as an FM quadrature detector. It was developed during the introduction of TV and FM radio and delivered an output voltage large enough to directly drive an end pentode while still allowing for some negative feedback. As most of the grids were tied together, even an 8-pin Rimlock base was sufficient in the case of the EQ40.

Last revised
Jun 14, 2026
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≈ 1 min
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Basic FM quadrature detector circuit using a nonode source ↗

A nonode is a type of thermionic valve that has nine active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a seven-grid vacuum tube, also sometimes called an enneode. An example was the EQ80/UQ80, which was used as an FM quadrature detector.1 It was developed during the introduction of TV and FM radio and delivered an output voltage large enough to directly drive an end pentode while still allowing for some negative feedback. As most of the grids were tied together, even an 8-pin Rimlock base was sufficient in the case of the EQ40.

See also

See also

Nonode 6Л1П (6L1P), Manufactured in Novosibirsk, 1970 source ↗
References

References

  1. Schindler, Patrik. "EQ80 Enneode" (PDF). Electron Tube Data sheets. pp. 413–422.