I'm interested in the tone differences between EL34/EL84 and 6V6/6L6 output tubes.
Here's what I know so far. There are a lot of generalizations.
Amps:
6L6 - Fender Deluxe Reverb
6V6 - Fender Princeton Reverb
EL34 - Marshall 50-watt - JMP, JCM, etc
EL84 - Marshall 18-watt
EL34/EL84 are found in Marshall amps, which are well known for distortion.
6V6/6L6 are found in Fender amps, which are well known for cleans and blues.
EL84 is a 9-pin tube that gets VERY hot with normal use. It seems to take a fair beating, but people like it for its tone.
6V6/6L6 seem to be more rugged (in general) than the EL84.
6V6/6L6 originally were designed for HiFi use; whereas the EL34/EL84 were designed for general purpose use.
In general, Fender amps get incredible cleans and mild blues distortion; and Marshall amps get fantastic distortion, but it's hard to get fantastic cleans.
Here's what I know so far. There are a lot of generalizations.
Amps:
6L6 - Fender Deluxe Reverb
6V6 - Fender Princeton Reverb
EL34 - Marshall 50-watt - JMP, JCM, etc
EL84 - Marshall 18-watt
EL34/EL84 are found in Marshall amps, which are well known for distortion.
6V6/6L6 are found in Fender amps, which are well known for cleans and blues.
EL84 is a 9-pin tube that gets VERY hot with normal use. It seems to take a fair beating, but people like it for its tone.
6V6/6L6 seem to be more rugged (in general) than the EL84.
6V6/6L6 originally were designed for HiFi use; whereas the EL34/EL84 were designed for general purpose use.
In general, Fender amps get incredible cleans and mild blues distortion; and Marshall amps get fantastic distortion, but it's hard to get fantastic cleans.
Comment