Hey guys,
A buddy of mine showed up with a few boxes of old tubes he's kept from the last 40 years of playing guitar. Some were old power tubes that were clearly very used, but he also had about 30 12AX7's that saw little use according to him.
He wanted me to "test them" so he could sell them on ebay, and I'd like to help the dude get some dough for this stuff. I don't have a tube tester, and I told him that I test tubes in-circuit. My non-scientific approach basically just has me saying "yes, this 12AX7 works" but that sort of description probably isn't going to get this guy a lot of bids.
I see a lot of ebay tube auctions show the results from Hickok tube testers as a de-facto standard, but is there anything I can do with an amp, scope, generator and multimeter for this guy that's better than "tube works"?
If I measure the AC input, should I expect to see an AC output 100x the amplitude for each triode in a 12AX7 for example?
A buddy of mine showed up with a few boxes of old tubes he's kept from the last 40 years of playing guitar. Some were old power tubes that were clearly very used, but he also had about 30 12AX7's that saw little use according to him.
He wanted me to "test them" so he could sell them on ebay, and I'd like to help the dude get some dough for this stuff. I don't have a tube tester, and I told him that I test tubes in-circuit. My non-scientific approach basically just has me saying "yes, this 12AX7 works" but that sort of description probably isn't going to get this guy a lot of bids.
I see a lot of ebay tube auctions show the results from Hickok tube testers as a de-facto standard, but is there anything I can do with an amp, scope, generator and multimeter for this guy that's better than "tube works"?
If I measure the AC input, should I expect to see an AC output 100x the amplitude for each triode in a 12AX7 for example?
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