Ad Widget

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

How to care of your tube amplifier

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • How to care of your tube amplifier

    How to care of your tube amplifier

    1. Take a little extra care in transporting them. While you can generally bang around and lightly toss solid-state amps into trunks, back seats of cars, truck beds, etc., with tube amps you have to be a little more careful. What i generally do when transporting tube amps is set aside a special place in the car so that the amp isn't going to be jostled around with hard shocks when i make abrupt movements with the car or hit bumps. Generally this means the back seat or the trunk with some towels or clothing around the amp. When you get to the gig, just make sure that you take special care not to bump the amp into other things, or to just drop the amp on the floor, if you're in the habit of doing that.

    2. Make sure that there is proper ventilation for the tubes. Tube amps run hot--especially if they are wired in class A--and they need proper ventilation. Generally this just means that you shouldn't put your polish cloth or set lists over the ventilation holes, and you shouldn't set the amp right against a wall so that there is no air to get to the vents. Some players even keep a fan on the amp, though i don't think this is necessary.

    3. Change the power tubes regularly. "Regularly" means a lot of things to a lot of different people. GENERALLY SPEAKING, six months to a year is fine for most power tubes if you're gigging regularly (say, once a week or once every other week) and rehearsing regularly--and this means at typical club volumes. If all you do is play the amp at home at bedroom levels, the tubes can last two years or more. If your amp is bias-adjustable, then you need to make sure that the bias is set when you change power tubes. If your amp is fixed-bias, it's generally a good idea to stick with the same power tubes that came with your amp.

    4. Make sure that a speaker is ALWAYS plugged into the amp. Tube amps need to see speakers plugged in at all times, so you cannot run a tube head or tube combo without the speaker plugged in! This is a big mistake and can cost you $200-300 if your amp blows a transformer. Even after you replace the tranny, the amp often sounds different--some describe the amp as being "neutered" after replacing a blown transformer.

    5. Make sure that the speakers are plugged in at the proper impedance--or at the very least, a mismatch in the "safe" direction. The best scenario is to match the impedance of the speaker or cabinet with the amp--if your speaker cabinet is 8 ohms, your amp should be set for 8 ohms for best results. If you plug this same 8-ohm cabinet into the 4-ohm setting on your amp, that will also be safe, but you will generally lose about half of your power as a result of the mismatch. If you take this same 8-ohm cabinet and opt for the 16-ohm setting on your amp, you're going to likely blow the head up as it tries to produce twice as much power. again, this can result in a blown transformer and the same neutered tone if you have to replace it.

    6. Use the standby switch when powering up and powering down. The standby switch allows the amp to sort of "warm up" and allows the tubes to settle into a sort of equilibrium state before it gets slammed with high voltage. If you generally let the amp warm up or down in standby for about 30 to 60 seconds when powering up or down, you'll find that the tubes last longer.

    That's about it, really...taking care of a tube amp is really not as difficult as one might make it out to be. With a little care and some maintenance, the amp is going to sound fantastic for a lifetime!

    http://www.kldguitar.com

  • #2
    Good advise. There's a few things I thought I'd mention...


    #3: The tubes in my Ampeg VT-22 are the 35 year old originals, and still doing their duty quite well. I tried a new set; didn't sound/test any different. The stock tubes in my MusicMan 212-65 were the original 6CA7s until a 3-foot drop cracked a solder joint; fried one tube. Some amps are a lot easier on tubes than others. I certainly wouldn't expect the same tube life from the EL84s in a PV Classic 30, for example.

    #4: A great many amps (certainly not all) have shorting jacks for speaker connections to avoid damage to the OP tranny & tube sockets. Tube amps, unlike solid state amps, will happily run with a dead short long enough for the guitarist to figure out there's no speaker connected.

    #5: Other than the output transformer, this is true... for solid state amps. A safe-direction mismatch for a tube amp is a downward one; ie, a 4 ohm speaker on the 8 ohm tap, hence the shorting jack mentioned above (0 impedance is better than infinite). It is exactly the opposite for a solid state amp. Generally, a one-step mismatch is OK either way with a tube amp, but downward is better. Also with tube amps, you won't notice a big difference in output as you would with SS, but it will sound the best when matched up.

    #6: Standby is for warm-up. You don't need to (and shouldn't, IMO) use it for power down, or breaks, etc. Just turn your master or guitar volume down. Tubes like it hot. Some would argue that at the voltages seen in guitar amps, cathode stripping (from no standby) is not the problem that is seen in RF transmitters running well over 1KV on the plates, and thus, not needed. In fact, long periods of standby can cause cathode poisoning. When I power down, I just flip both at the same time, mainly so it's in standby when I power up again. Remember, there's a pile of cathode-biased Champs out there with no standby still running a stock 6V6, and they get the double whammy of cathode stripping and high start-up/run dissipation. All the Bogens I have (SS rect) have no standby, and they're are still running stock tubes. Some of these put over 500V on the plates. Granted, these commercial PAs were meant to stay on 24/7, but myself and others have been flipping these things on/off for years with no standby.

    Comment


    • #3
      The main one that most Musicians have a problem with is : Keep beer off the tops from spilling in the pots and circuitry. That sucks !
      KB

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Dave Curtis, dB AudioTech View Post
        Good advise. There's a few things I thought I'd mention...


        #3: The tubes in my Ampeg VT-22 are the 35 year old originals, and still doing their duty quite well. I tried a new set; didn't sound/test any different.
        Same story for my Ampeg V4. Ampeg also vibration proofed the chassis by using rubber dampers, which is something that other manufacturers should have copied to minimize tube damage during transportation and tube microphonics.

        Comment


        • #5
          cut and pasted with non-credited source. 10 for brazenness.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by dai h. View Post
            cut and pasted with non-credited source. 10 for brazenness.
            Pretty much copied straight from here:

            http://www.theguitarfiles.com/guitarfile-print-184.html

            Comment


            • #7
              I figured it was plagiarized, since the english in the post didn't match the english on his website...
              (well, the title was his ;o)

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by dai h. View Post
                cut and pasted with non-credited source. 10 for brazenness.
                Not surprising,this guy is supposedly an amp builder,but has posed some pretty rudimentary questions here in the past.Not that simple questions are a bad thing,but it seems odd from someone who builds and sells amps.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by stokes View Post
                  Not that simple questions are a bad thing,
                  Thanks, I appreciate!
                  Carlo Pipitone

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I've been trying to tell you fellas about this guy for months, he is a worthless troll that only wants to take and take, but doesn't want to be part of the community here. This thread of his is probably in response to a post I made in his last thread about his taking and never giving. So he googles a little bit and finds something to plagarize.

                    Don't respond to his posts and maybe he'll go away.
                    Stop by my web page!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Well, he probably does this (and all his other activities on forums) to get his company website search engine optimized. If popular threads on forums link to his site, that pushes him up on Google's PageRank algorithm. Notice how every one of his posts links his site. The plagiarized content is just a payload to entice people to read it.

                      So if you dislike the guy, ignore his threads and don't reply to them.

                      (I discovered this by accident, if you google me, my own site is #3, mostly due to my obsessive forum and mailing list activities over the years)
                      "Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Regis View Post
                        I've been trying to tell you fellas about this guy for months, he is a worthless troll that only wants to take and take, but doesn't want to be part of the community here. This thread of his is probably in response to a post I made in his last thread about his taking and never giving. So he googles a little bit and finds something to plagarize.

                        Don't respond to his posts and maybe he'll go away.
                        I remembered he had gotten under somebodies skin in the past,but had forgotten who,I was involved in that thread also,and agree 100% with you,Regis.I couldnt figure out what this guy was up to either,but Steves explanation seems to hit it on the head.
                        Carlo,no thanks is needed from you,your questions are always honest and you give and take like everybody else here.We all have different levels of experience here,and even a seemingly simple question brings about discussion and a trade of ideas/opinions that almost always result in some level of learning to some or all of us.This guy,like Regis pointed out a few times,poses a question and doesnt even get involved in any kind of follow-up.Couldnt figure out what the heck he was up to,but Steve probably has him figured out.Good call Steve.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Im a new owner of a tube amp and this is great information, thanks!

                          Comment

                          Working...
                          X