I recently bought a nice Deluxe Reverb RI and it sounds extremely good, no hum, yet it had a pop when you switched to standby. So I tested the tubes and one of the 6V6's measured as a short on my B&K 650 tester. So I threw that tube away, installed some test jacks with 1% 1 ohm resistors on the output cathodes and proceeded to try some "matched" tubes I had accumulated of the years.
I found that tubes I matched for gain on my tester were not even close for idle currents in the amplifier. I re-checked everything and the currents stayed with the tubes---no amplifier problem AFAIK. I had to use dissimilar brands of 6V6 to match the idle currents.
So I bought some "matched" pairs of JJ's and guess what? They don't idle with matching currents either! I get 29/21 mA with one pair and 20/24 mA with another pair (reversing the tubes only reverses the currents).
So I have 2 questions:
1. What should i expect from "matched" tubes?
2. Why is there no change in the hum of the amplifier regardless of the tubes---even with shorted tube?? I would have thought that a bad tube would sound horrible!
Matthew
I found that tubes I matched for gain on my tester were not even close for idle currents in the amplifier. I re-checked everything and the currents stayed with the tubes---no amplifier problem AFAIK. I had to use dissimilar brands of 6V6 to match the idle currents.
So I bought some "matched" pairs of JJ's and guess what? They don't idle with matching currents either! I get 29/21 mA with one pair and 20/24 mA with another pair (reversing the tubes only reverses the currents).
So I have 2 questions:
1. What should i expect from "matched" tubes?
2. Why is there no change in the hum of the amplifier regardless of the tubes---even with shorted tube?? I would have thought that a bad tube would sound horrible!
Matthew
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