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Author Topic: new valves  (Read 22534 times)
Kri
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« Reply #15 on: July 08, 2011, 07:21:52 PM »

I have a new chinese made Golden Dragon 12AX7/ECC83 in V1. (in my 50W OTS)
Best tube I've ever heard, and I've tried a lot different brands.
I tested it in V2 as well, but couldn't hear any sonic difference
to my other tubes.

But, highly recommended in V1  Smiley
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ampkits
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« Reply #16 on: July 08, 2011, 09:15:45 PM »

I have a new chinese made Golden Dragon 12AX7/ECC83 in V1. (in my 50W OTS)
Best tube I've ever heard, and I've tried a lot different brands.
I tested it in V2 as well, but couldn't hear any sonic difference
to my other tubes.

But, highly recommended in V1  Smiley

Nahhhhhh! Can't be! It's Chinese. it's in Asia!

(this is tongue in cheek).
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212Mavguy
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« Reply #17 on: July 18, 2011, 01:10:52 PM »

Recently took delivery of a Marsh fsx-50 Overlord, an OTS built with Ceriatone boards in the US with Mercury and Heyboer iron.    I tried a pair of Sylvania 6bg6ga tubes with adapters in it.  They are not coming out!  That tube type is a secret weapon.  Before sticking those in I tried a pair of JAN Philips 7581a's, the Syl 6bg6ga's have the same guts in them, and are found at a fraction of the price of vintage 6l6gc's...you may need to buy a few in order to get a closely matched pair, but they are worth the effort to get, they are wonderful sounding. 

FWIW...
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212Mavguy
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« Reply #18 on: August 09, 2011, 02:27:37 AM »

@ mcinku

Well, I intentional use new production tubes in my amps only... I have two big reasons for it...

1.) Currently own 5 amps, if I would use NOS tubes for all of them I would become insolvent  Grin
2.) Once I settle on the tubes I usually mod the amp to suit me best for those tubes... if I would do this with some rare NOS tubes, I would mod my amps quite often. With easy to get new production tubes this is not a problem.


Sez the tiny mouse to a real lion of tone...after much forethought and thankful patience in time, waiting for others here to post, ...................................................................

;~)

Respect to you first of all...

...Beg to politely disagree about the need to tweak circuits of a particular amp after subbing so called NOS tubes... also your opinion about un-aford-ability of same...true NOS is unwelcome, they need to be broken in at least to offer their best, just like burning in amp parts, then they aren't NOS anymore.  VOS (vintage old stock) far better IMO.  Stick them in and listen, if you don't like lots, yank and sub again, just like certain parts for certain places, like tone caps and resistor types for instance.

Umm,

Have read in Merlin's book (yep, I bought it and am glad) and yep, it's more than a bit above my admittedly tiny but tone oriented brain to digest... the idea in his pages about (paraphrasing) tube rolling  not very important compared to circuit design and measurement of actual voltages/currents in circuit,

well, yep, up to a certain point, and then...

I disagree, strongly. 

Selecting certain vintage tubes for certain roles in exquisitively fabricated circuits is the other side, like the frosting within and upon a fantastically prepared layer cake for a special and wonderful wedding of tone, a small part of the whole production, just like a wedding...which can be compared to a Dumble type circuit as...

the sacred or not so...act of playing elecrtric guitar, as if on stage, whether for one in you home or an audience of millions.   Hope that guitar is well set up and the rest of the chain is deserving of that amp!

Am I right in my assumption that that you know where to get the very "Holy Grail" amp building components that you and a few score of others on this planet desire and know about to derive awesome tones for a given circuit?  That knowledge HAD to come from EXTENSIVE research and practice, that is after all, the real guts of science even if derived from not perfectly executed scientific protocol, right?

Well, how about the idea that the vintage old stock (NOT brand spanking new!) tubes chosen for certain spots within those exquisite circuits are helping to build that special wedding cake?  And that there are general tendencies for those tubes to behave within certain circuit environments just like those chosen components tend to do as well?

They can be found, easily.  But it also takes time, some money, and personal experiences to build up the synergy between well chosen tobes, well chosen parts, lead dress and circuit measurements, to help build that cake of tone.

They are affordable, period.    But getting to that affordable place takes lots of experiences and research, and yes spending money for better and worse, another inexact science fo sho.

Yep, the worm can has been spilled, for intention of good.  mcinku, i welcome PM or public discourse.  You are a hero for all here, also to me IMHO.

Peace.
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mcinku
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« Reply #19 on: August 09, 2011, 05:57:43 AM »

I have no problem with your opinion... non at all.

Just to explain my need to tweak the amps... I usually build an amp and normally just use JJ tubes or something like that. After a while, when I get to know the amp... after a few gigs and after I'm sure the amp had a good "burn in"....then in some cases (not always) I might decide to change a cap or a pot here and there... I don't know, let say to reduce the bass or tame hi-end, whatever...
I also have an access to some private stock NOS tubes and I tried some in my time... for example once I tried Ei in V1 (I even bought one) and the clean side of my OTS was just wonderful but on the other hand the OD was not working at all, so I would have to mod the amp to get what I want if I would end up with that tube. Ok, that Ei was not that expensive but still I ended up with my JJ in V1 at the end... and guess what, I get compliments about my tone every time.
At the end of the day far more important that my tone, is the playing... but to play well, the tone needs to inspire you, right... and that's my goal. When the amp is doing that to me, than I'm done... no more tube swapping or mods.
...and if I want to try something else (which happens a lot)... I have four more amps to occupy me.
 Wink
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Tone Control
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« Reply #20 on: August 09, 2011, 07:46:02 PM »

I think I share Mckinku's approach
This will depend on your personal situation, i.e. how many amps you have, and how much you enjoy tweaking amps.
At my current stage, money to buy amps is not a struggle, so I have 15 now (sorry, I was playing 7 years before I got my first valve amp, so it's only fair)
When you have a few, you try to tweak each one to make it suit you, once I find the most inspiring tone, after trying the valves I have in stock, I leave it alone, or I buy some more to try. For me, often the change involves using a lower gain valve here or there. Sometimes a valve sounds rubbish in one amp or one position in the amp.

For amps that do not bring me joy, I move them on to someone else - I give up trying different valves in them.
I can see that someone might choose to tweak a favourite amp to a finer level with rare vintage valves, but to me it's about having an instrument (amp+guitar) that inspires and takes me somewhere else, so when I get to that point, I play.
I know some carry around different valve sets for different gigs, but for me, each amp has its own character, which you can  temper a little with different valve types, but I think the amp type, valve type, guitar and pickups offer enough variation for me, although I can see that finer-tuning with NOS would offer some more options, I believe that for me, plugging in a different guitar will offer more still

None of this is meant as a criticism, I want to know what each of my amps can deliver, tune that a little if needed (in a repeatable way), and then play. I can see that a little extra can be achieved with extensive trials with different tubes, but once the amp is inspirational, that's mission accomplished for me and being able to repeat it is attractive, so I too usually stick to new valves (although I do have a few old EF86s and 5751s)

Cheers
Tone
« Last Edit: August 09, 2011, 11:10:54 PM by Tone Control » Logged

Dr Tone Control, Strats mostly, prefer saturated clean tones, a little OD sometimes
BM50, JTM45, 36w EF86, DZ30, Expression, + non-Ceriatones (Matchless, Victoria, Wienbrock)
Just started with pedals a little after a 10 year purist spell, but usually just delay
Sean
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« Reply #21 on: August 09, 2011, 09:53:18 PM »

Got a used Bluesmaster HRM 100w a few weeks ago- it came with Tungsol ri power tubes- 2 of which redplated and died within a week of getting the amp.  The preamp tubes (JJ 12ax7's) were kind of noisey as well- .  It sounded fine (when it wasn't noisy), but I gig and am always concerned about the reliability of new tubes- they don't seem to last and tend to die at the most inconvienient times.  In all fairness, I have no idea how much time was on the tubes as the amp was used.  The amp was also biased really cold, but that is no guarantee that the tubes weren't abused at some point.

So I reached into my stash of good stuff and retubed with Philips 7581a's and Jan/Philips 12ax7's.  Hopefully, these'll last a long time. 

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plasticvonaband
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« Reply #22 on: August 13, 2011, 11:50:31 PM »

I have to update mine a bit. I swapped JJ's into V1 & V2 and moved one of the GE Long Plate 12AX7's in to the PI Spot in my Bluesmaster. Marked improvement in tone, surprisingly enough. It seems the old Long Plates were a little to warm and dark for the Bluesmaster Circuit. I may try some Telefunkin's or GE Short Plates in there at some point to see how they compare, but at this point, I am thoroughly surprised by the JJ's, so much so that I swapped the Weber 1265's back in, and fell in love with them again! I still run either TAD 6L6WGC's or JAN Phillips 6L6WGB's, depending on what kind of mood I'm in...
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Overdrive is like peanut butter. Some like it crunchy, some like it creamy.
Bluesmaster 50 2x12 combo and some guitars.
212Mavguy
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« Reply #23 on: August 14, 2011, 03:01:02 AM »

Went on a tube buying binge last week on eBay.  Picked up 3 pairs of true NOS 6bg6ga's, one pair of Sylvania, about 21 bucks including shipping, they are 3mv apart for matching, a pair of GE 6bg6ga blackplates for 22 bucks shipped, they are less than 1mv apart, and a yet to arrive pair of 6bg6ga GE blackplates for about 13 bucks delivered.   The Sylvanias have the 7581a's guts, the GE's plates were pretty beefy looking as well, in my Marsh 50w OTS type the GE's were a bit smoother than the Syl's, but the Syl's sounded their best when I biased them up a bit on the hot side, between 40-45mv...they seem to be able to run a bit hot, and for that kind of price, which is less than a pair of new production 6l6gc tubes I don't worry about slightly reduced life.  Will be getting a pair of Pearl tube coolers for them, which undoubtably will greatly help longevity.   The 6l6/6bg6ga adaptors I got from ayumitubes on ebay came apart when removing the tubes, so I reglued them with a generous, carefully applied gel type CA glue and they are staying together now. 

@ PVB, for that Blues Master circuit, I'd try a lightly used shortplate Amperex Bugle Boy or Philips Miniwatt, with the right trangle etch in V1, followed by an RFT 12ax7 in V2.  Another strong shortplate Amperex or possibly Siemens in the PI will yield a very sweet, harmonically rich tone set.

@ mcinku, I tried a Philips ecg labeled long smooth grayplate EI in V1 in my OTS with similar results as yours, I yanked it out.  The Canadian version of shortplate Amperex, Electrohome 12ax7, is wonderful sounding and dead quiet for microphonics.   That is my current V1.

@ tone, sometimes I'll roll tubes for a particular guitar or speaker cab!  Don't have as many amps as you, but have 7 or 8 great ones, mostly heads.  Liked your post, reasonates with my experiences.

Vintage old stock tubes and in the case of the power tubes, can be affordable, and very nice sounding.  I have read that HAD favored the Sylvania 6l6gc and 7581a's as well as the GE short grayplate 12ax7a/7025.  I like the Siemens shortplates or aforementioned Amperexes better, they are more harmonically rich and not as bloated on the bottom end.  The Siemens can get a bit spendy.
« Last Edit: August 14, 2011, 03:03:45 AM by 212Mavguy » Logged
plasticvonaband
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« Reply #24 on: August 14, 2011, 03:12:59 AM »

@212 I,ve been keeping my eyes out for Amperex Bugle Boys for a while now, just never seem to have the money when they come up, darn the luck. I am quite pleased and still surprised by how good the JJ's sound in there. I never would have believed it.
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Overdrive is like peanut butter. Some like it crunchy, some like it creamy.
Bluesmaster 50 2x12 combo and some guitars.
212Mavguy
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« Reply #25 on: August 14, 2011, 03:44:52 AM »

PVB,

keep the faith and surf eBay daily.  Look for auctions that close midweek, mornings, or other odd times.  Sunday evenings yield the highest prices for tube sellers.  Memorize the RFT mica and plate structure and getter deposit shape, they are found with many different brand labels.  The ones with the orange Amperex globe label and fat bottle are bulletproof for microphonics and IMHO the most desirable.  I have one with the Realistic Lifetime label with gold pins, although it has the normal bottle width. 

The Amperex and Philips Miniwatt types will last longer than the most recent JJ's.  They are more harmonically rich.  Look for that right triangle etch low on the bottle side, signifies that they were made in Heerlen, Holland.

 
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plasticvonaband
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« Reply #26 on: September 02, 2011, 09:15:45 PM »

I just ordered two ANOS Telefunken ECC83s with ribbed plates from Mike at KCA, we'll see how they sound! If they sound good i may pick up a few more, if they are still available. I wish i had a bit more knowledge so i could change out the tone stack components to shape my tone, but i don't, so i am and always have been an old school tube swapper  Grin i'll let ya'll know how it goes!

Gregg
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Overdrive is like peanut butter. Some like it crunchy, some like it creamy.
Bluesmaster 50 2x12 combo and some guitars.
212Mavguy
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« Reply #27 on: September 03, 2011, 02:41:09 AM »

Those ribbed plate 'funkens are a bit brighter and to my ears more desirable for guitar amp use than the smooth plates.  When you put them in a high gain situation, they will deliver a nice, violin-like compressed, smooth sustain.  Good for V2, PI (if decently balanced between the triodes), have one right now in my C-lator.  Sure hope you like them.  One stupid amp trick I found out, when you socket the pair power tubes in a 50 watter, swap them side for side, one way will give slightly more sustain than the other.
« Last Edit: September 03, 2011, 02:45:28 AM by 212Mavguy » Logged
plasticvonaband
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« Reply #28 on: September 09, 2011, 12:23:10 AM »

Earlier this week i did some voltage testing with various preamp tubes i the HRM Bypassed Bluesmaster which i will post tomorrow after i finish the last round of testining. I also did some twiddling and fiddling with bias on the power tubes and found that the ideal bias for my rig running the TAD 6L6WGC-STR's at 445 volts is 36.6 mA. Very balanced at that setting, and no farty bass and no honkiness. Seems that these tubes like to be run a lil cooler than 70% to sound their best. I also found that my PI trimmer sounds best with between a 7-8 volt swing between V3a and V3b much more bloom and sustain. very cool. I was very happy. I was running my GE Long Plate in V1, A JJ in V2, and a GT12AX7R (Basically a higher grade sovtek 12AX7WA) in PI and all was right with the world.

And then today...

I installed a ribbed Telefunken in V1 and a JAN GE 5751 in V2 and did some noodling this morning. All i can say is wow! The sound coming out of this thing on the clean channel is amazing now! Much brighter, but that's not all, much more balanced, detailed and focused throughout the frequency range. The highs and upper mids are so much more present i can back the treble and prescence controls back and still have some shimmer, and that's with my dark les paul!

The 5751 in V2 helps with the volume jump caused by bypassing the HRM circuit and also smooths out the OD even further (Bypassing the HRM smooths it out alot). It rounds the tone out quite a bit and just really offers a nice balanced OD tone whether in standard OD, PAB, Mega PAB, or using a Boosta Grande or other clean boost. It makes the amp very very versatile and I can highly recommend the Telefunken for V1 for BM amps, and the combo of the Telefunken in V1 and JAN GE 5751 in V2 for those who have bypassed their HRM tonestack.

I will do some further playing this weekend to get some more impressions, but my intial impressions (harmony central style Wink )  are very positive!!
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Overdrive is like peanut butter. Some like it crunchy, some like it creamy.
Bluesmaster 50 2x12 combo and some guitars.
212Mavguy
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« Reply #29 on: September 09, 2011, 12:44:44 AM »

Saaaaweeeeet!  Glad to hear you are enjoying the vintage old stock goodness.  I'm gonna sit and soak in a hot bathtub, listen to some blues, have a couple brews and when I get out am gonna play through those new hemp cones some more.  Man, they really suit the singing bloom of the D-style tones!
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