MLGrado
New member
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- #1
Hi all. New to the forum.
I caught the tube bug, and caught it hard. I started with a tube amp back in February. Initially rolled in new production tubes. Then came the sickness when I bought my first NOS tube. Since then, in the last 3 months, I now own probably 150 vintage tubes. Some NOS, most others are likely used a little bit.
This week came my first tube tester. When you come into possession of 150 tubes in such a short amount of time, of course at least some of those are impulse purchases, or eBay auctions you never thought you would win with your lowball bid. Getting rid of a few to recover some of that cash was/is in order. Hence the tester. Gotta know what I am selling people. It has already saved me from listing a couple duds that still sounded alright, but were apparently marginal at best.
The most interesting thing though, is what I saw on the tester when I put on my almost brand new JJ Electronic EL84 tubes. I have two matched sets of 4. Two, since I felt my first set was prematurely wearing out. Now that I have tested them, my suspicions of early death are confirmed.
My integrated is Cathode biased, which is apparently pretty hard on tubes. I didn't suspect that things would be this bad after only a couple hundred hours! Sure enough, of my 8 EL84 tubes, 3 of them are already toast. Two of them test low on emissions, the third tests fine initally, then slowly falls off back into the 'replace' zone of the tester meter.
I have put at least as many hours, probably more on the Vintage Sylvania Black Plate EL84 tubes currently in the amp. The test meter says those tubes are still strong and robust, in spite of being used in a Baldwin organ before they came to me, and being subject to my marathon listening sessions that can last 8 hours or more.
I have always felt that the new production tubes in my possession from JJ and New Sensor sounded just fine. Looks like their durability and longevity is what may be questionable.
What are your experiences with the quality of new production tubes?
Thanks!
Andrew
I caught the tube bug, and caught it hard. I started with a tube amp back in February. Initially rolled in new production tubes. Then came the sickness when I bought my first NOS tube. Since then, in the last 3 months, I now own probably 150 vintage tubes. Some NOS, most others are likely used a little bit.
This week came my first tube tester. When you come into possession of 150 tubes in such a short amount of time, of course at least some of those are impulse purchases, or eBay auctions you never thought you would win with your lowball bid. Getting rid of a few to recover some of that cash was/is in order. Hence the tester. Gotta know what I am selling people. It has already saved me from listing a couple duds that still sounded alright, but were apparently marginal at best.
The most interesting thing though, is what I saw on the tester when I put on my almost brand new JJ Electronic EL84 tubes. I have two matched sets of 4. Two, since I felt my first set was prematurely wearing out. Now that I have tested them, my suspicions of early death are confirmed.
My integrated is Cathode biased, which is apparently pretty hard on tubes. I didn't suspect that things would be this bad after only a couple hundred hours! Sure enough, of my 8 EL84 tubes, 3 of them are already toast. Two of them test low on emissions, the third tests fine initally, then slowly falls off back into the 'replace' zone of the tester meter.
I have put at least as many hours, probably more on the Vintage Sylvania Black Plate EL84 tubes currently in the amp. The test meter says those tubes are still strong and robust, in spite of being used in a Baldwin organ before they came to me, and being subject to my marathon listening sessions that can last 8 hours or more.
I have always felt that the new production tubes in my possession from JJ and New Sensor sounded just fine. Looks like their durability and longevity is what may be questionable.
What are your experiences with the quality of new production tubes?
Thanks!
Andrew