While we're on the topic of octal tubes, I was wondering if most high-mu octal tubes tend to be microphonic in combo amps.
Or, to ask the question another way, are the larger plate structures in octal tubes inherently more liable to ring at audio frequencies?
I was recently working on a guitar amp that uses two 6SC7s, and, out of six I have on hand (four 6SC7 and two 6SC7-GT), I was only able to find two that would work without ringing badly at certain frequencies--and that was with the help of silicone tube dampers.
And are there any tricks--instead of or in addition to tube dampers--that can help minimize the tendency to microphonic resonance if you're stuck with a combo amp that uses octal preamp tubes and reengineering the whole thing is not an option? The problem seems worst to me in amps that put the tubes right behind the speaker.
I love separate heads and speaker enclosures.
Or, to ask the question another way, are the larger plate structures in octal tubes inherently more liable to ring at audio frequencies?
I was recently working on a guitar amp that uses two 6SC7s, and, out of six I have on hand (four 6SC7 and two 6SC7-GT), I was only able to find two that would work without ringing badly at certain frequencies--and that was with the help of silicone tube dampers.
And are there any tricks--instead of or in addition to tube dampers--that can help minimize the tendency to microphonic resonance if you're stuck with a combo amp that uses octal preamp tubes and reengineering the whole thing is not an option? The problem seems worst to me in amps that put the tubes right behind the speaker.
I love separate heads and speaker enclosures.
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