HI all. I'd like to take this opportunity to thank enverybody here who has helped me out so far with troubleshooting issues..I have a question. I have noticed that some tubes glow much brighter than others and thus give off more heat than others. I would assume that this might be due to the design and the manufacture process involved and maybe even the type of material used for the various elements. THe EL 84 tubes I have noticed appear to run very hot...and the different brands of these tubes such as JJ's, Ruby, Mesa-Boogie Brand, and GT brands all run very hot but I have noticed that the GT series glow very bright when compared to other brands. Is this sort of thing normal?? If so,should I have a set of tubes that have the same amount of glow in the same amp for example? Or is it ok to mix the various brands...On another note I had two matched sets of Mesa EL 84's coded Yellow. I installed both of these sets in an amp that required a matched set of 4. I did not touch the bias controls at all.I just installed these and monitored the bias for each tubes. Two tubes from one set drew about 11ma and the other two tubes drew around 20ma. The specs for the amp states that the bias is corect when all 4 tubes drew betweem 16 and 21 ma.In order to bring the two lower tubes up to this range I would have to adjust the bias. Then the other tubes would be much higher than 20ma. There is only one bias pot for the amp. So I had to get a bunch of tubes and keep swapping them until I was able to get 4 tubes that sat within that range without adjusting the bias control. SO I went one step further..I got tubes that were as colse together as possible. Now they range from 16ma to 18ma...Was this the proper thing to do? I still have the amp here but want to return it to the customer soon. It is a Hughes and Kettner Quad EL84....combo. The amp sounds great but some of the tubes glow brighter than others and of course like I mentioned above they seem very hot. So I was wondering if anybody can shed some light on this issue for me...and what does these codes mean...yellow, green, red, etc..then there are numbers on other tubes such as 6550"s which range from 1 to 10. And I am sure that other tubes will have different coding schemes as well...I thought that if tubes had a certain code then they would pretty much have the same characteristics and draw the same amount of current at idle. I take it now that this is not the case. And I appolgize for this long post but this really has be baffled...Cn anybody out there attempt to clear this up for me...somewhat....THanks for your time...
Cheers,
Bernie
Cheers,
Bernie
Comment