Originally posted by Justin Thomas
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In a manner, you're totally correct, and I agree with you, in that, in manufacturing back in the heyday, *anyone* who wanted to make a tube could do so, and they didn't have to look the same.
RCA had a set of blue-prints to do so for their design. Which was different from GE's set of blue-prints to do so for their design. Which was different from Sylvania's set of blue-prints to do so for their design...etc. However, each company had to match the spec standards set forth.
But as we all know, just because you can plug a 6L6 into a 5881 slot, does NOT mean that you can plug a 5881 into a 6L6 slot and expect the same results/performance. So it's not so much the looks that I'm getting hung up on (as much as it might seem), those usually are merely indicators. However, in the case of Soviet tubes, the looks often tend to note completely different tubes, as opposed to version revisions (see below).
I'm more hung up on the specs. And the identification of the actual tubes 6П3с-е vs 6П3с (as example in my prior post) to try and see where the actual differences lie. In the 6П3с-е vs 6П3с example, it seems that it's very much akin to the minor (but possibly important differences) between the real T-S 5881 and the 6L6. Critically important to certain circuits, but interchangeable in others.
But a 6П3с-е body fitted into, and sold as a "5881 reissue" seems like it would completely be an error. And that's part of what I was trying to get a better understanding of.
Originally posted by Justin Thomas
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Originally posted by Justin Thomas
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You can however blame Sovtek/New Sensor for all the marketing and subsequent technical confusion.
And you can blame Reflektor for not binning/destroying the trash that didn't meet standards. Oh wait. You can't. They didn't have standards to adhere to. Oh yes. You can. They simply chose NOT to adhere (or create their own, and then adhere) to them for profit sake.
Originally posted by Justin Thomas
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Kind of like the old EI smoothplates that came off of the original Telefunken equipment. Those *could have matched* real Telefunken quality had they adhered to the original standards and processes. But they didn't. For a number of reasons.
Same for Philips/Amperex/etc. They had factories in Holland, Canada, USA, and elsewhere. However, they were all manufactured to a set standard. And they were all uniform.
All of them had their cherries (ie):
RCA: black plate
Amperex: Bugle Boy
Anyways, hopefully you get my drift, or at least what my intent/goal is.
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