Short Version: Even with the bias pot cranked, I can't get the tubes to bias hotter than around 25mA.
Long Version: Before I knew enough to bias tubes on my own, I took my SRRI into a shop for a repair. It was busting fuses everytime I turned it on. The shop, as I have come to learn, is questionable at best. They fixed the issue and installed a new set of tubes in it while they were at it (at my request).
Since then, I had a tube blow (about 2 years later, so I hope it was just a bad tube and not related something else wrong with the amp) and I bought a bias tester w/ a 1ohm resistor in it to read mA as mV. I bought it on the cheap, so I don't really know what precision the resistor is, but reading resistance from lead to lead on the tester gives me around 1.4 ohms.
That having been said, I can get the tubes to bias to a reading of around 34mV on my multimeter, but no hotter. Plugging into Ohm's Law, that gives me less than 25mA of current through the tube.
Could their repair have robbed me of more power tube current? If so, how do I correct it? Thanks
Long Version: Before I knew enough to bias tubes on my own, I took my SRRI into a shop for a repair. It was busting fuses everytime I turned it on. The shop, as I have come to learn, is questionable at best. They fixed the issue and installed a new set of tubes in it while they were at it (at my request).
Since then, I had a tube blow (about 2 years later, so I hope it was just a bad tube and not related something else wrong with the amp) and I bought a bias tester w/ a 1ohm resistor in it to read mA as mV. I bought it on the cheap, so I don't really know what precision the resistor is, but reading resistance from lead to lead on the tester gives me around 1.4 ohms.
That having been said, I can get the tubes to bias to a reading of around 34mV on my multimeter, but no hotter. Plugging into Ohm's Law, that gives me less than 25mA of current through the tube.
Could their repair have robbed me of more power tube current? If so, how do I correct it? Thanks
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