I'd venture a guess that the "G" may have stood for Giga as in Gigahertz, and the "M" for Mega as in megahertz, which would mean that it was used in a frequency counter. Ira.

On 5/5/2016 1:56 AM, Jonathan F. wrote:
I have added a few tubes today !:)

Two are "interesting"

XN10 by Siemens, have found absolutely no information

B4024 by Burroughs, i wonder what the G and the M was standing for.


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