thumb|upright|A Mullard TDD4 valve. The gold spray coating served no purpose other than to hide the blackened interior, as Mullard valves were still manufactured using the azide process, long abandoned by other makers. upright|thumb|A Mullard EL34 power pentode thumb|An EL84 valve made in Russia in the 21st century
thumb|upright|A Mullard TDD4 valve. The gold spray coating served no purpose other than to hide the blackened interior, as Mullard valves were still manufactured using the azide process, long abandoned by other makers. upright|thumb|A Mullard EL34 power pentode thumb|An EL84 valve made in Russia in the 21st century
Mullard Limited was a British manufacturer of electronic components. The Mullard Radio Valve Co. Ltd. of Southfields, London, was founded in 1920 by Captain Stanley R. Mullard, who had previously designed thermionic valves for the Admiralty before becoming managing director of the Z Electric Lamp Co. The company soon moved to Hammersmith, London and then in 1923 to Balham, London. The head office in later years was Mullard House at 1–19 Torrington Place, Bloomsbury, now part of University College London.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).