Jerome W
Active member
If you can not remember having problems with your tube gear I am sorry to tell you, you have Alzheimers
Excellent One ! :lmao:
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If you can not remember having problems with your tube gear I am sorry to tell you, you have Alzheimers
Excellent One ! :lmao:
Envoyé de mon iPhone à l'aide de Tapatalk
I've had tons of problems with tubes. Pieces from Wright sound, welborne, audio research, Jolida, Cary, air tight, sophia, and Allnic have had to go back for repair. My Allnic integrated was my most problematic. Blown tubes, blown caps, knobs that fell off due to general low build quality. As far as I can remember, I have not had to send in Shindo for repair. My Sinhonias a while back needed some freshening up when I sold them.
Best of luck with the D'YQ. Those are gorgeous and worth your effort. My GM 70 have been cruising without a hiccup for 2 years, but I'd love to hear those parallel 300b.
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Just a quick update on the D'Yquem status.
Last night a friend whom I met on the other site came over to help me troubleshoot the amp problem.
He brought his tube tester, some spare tubes and fuses.
First we tested the GL300b's. Both tested like new, no problems. This did not surprise me as the issue originally was not like my previous issues where I actually saw the 300b glow bright red before it failed. This issue was after 30-40 seconds the amp just completely shut down, no power at all.
Although we highly doubted there was an issue with the 6AW8A tubes we tested them anyway. Both tested good.
We then opened the amp to check the fuse. The fuse looked fine and it also tested good.
Inside the D'Yquem there are two 6AL3 tubes soldered to some internal wiring. We decided to test these as well. It was a little tricky to remove them from their sockets and insert them in the tube tester without damaging the solder points as the wires are quite short. First tube tested good and the second one was completely dead.
Is this the problem solved? Don't know yet until tomorrow night when we will replace the bad GE 6AL3 tube and re-solder it back to the wiring.
Keeping my fingers crossed this will cure the problem and hoping it was just a bad GE tube and not something more serious that caused the tube to fail.
This is as far as I am willing to go on my own, anything more complicated and the amp will get shipped away for repair.
Good luck and good work! I hope that fixes your issues.
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When it did work. Did you like it? Gorgeous view by the way. Where do you live?
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It was ok. Not quite as refined as other 300b I've had, but not too shabby. A bit higher powered, a tad less magic. Not totally unlike my wright 2a3, but my memory is unreliable with such comparisons, I suppose.
Given the lack of growth, that looks to be a winter view or late fall through my front window. I live on the north side of Chicago.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Just a quick update on the D'Yquem status.
Last night a friend whom I met on the other site came over to help me troubleshoot the amp problem.
He brought his tube tester, some spare tubes and fuses.
First we tested the GL300b's. Both tested like new, no problems. This did not surprise me as the issue originally was not like my previous issues where I actually saw the 300b glow bright red before it failed. This issue was after 30-40 seconds the amp just completely shut down, no power at all.
Although we highly doubted there was an issue with the 6AW8A tubes we tested them anyway. Both tested good.
We then opened the amp to check the fuse. The fuse looked fine and it also tested good.
Inside the D'Yquem there are two 6AL3 tubes soldered to some internal wiring. We decided to test these as well. It was a little tricky to remove them from their sockets and insert them in the tube tester without damaging the solder points as the wires are quite short. First tube tested good and the second one was completely dead.
Is this the problem solved? Don't know yet until tomorrow night when we will replace the bad GE 6AL3 tube and re-solder it back to the wiring.
Keeping my fingers crossed this will cure the problem and hoping it was just a bad GE tube and not something more serious that caused the tube to fail.
This is as far as I am willing to go on my own, anything more complicated and the amp will get shipped away for repair.
Any amp that was this unreliable I would have dumped faster than a used prophylactic. This is supposed to be about a hobby that is fun and relaxing and not one where you sweat bullets every time you power your amp on. You have either had an incredible run of bad tubes or it's simply a defective design or a defective unit. You have already come to that conclusion and I agree with you.
You mean like your Krell where you wrote several threads on having the buzzing transformer fixed? You complained about that amp for 2 years dude.
If I had this issue, they would have just gone back. Period.