Built-from-scratch preamp, single dual-triode, designed very conservatively with a view toward long tube life, tested extensively for proper voltages (including spot-on 6.3 volts at the heaters and a 22% safety margin for heater-to-cathode voltage in the CF half), running fine for months, then one morning about 5 seconds after I power it up I hear this faint “pop” from the tube. The gain drops to maybe half of what it was, but the preamp still sounds great.
Long story short, bad tube, and it was a relatively new JJ with less than 100 hours on it. Replacement tube worked fine. So did four more. Tried the original tube again, low gain again. Wiggling the tube in the socket caused no changes. Tried one of the replacement tubes again, back to normal again. Socket pins are tight and clean and have never caused me problems. No internal wiring shorts.
I’ve heard of broken grids, i.e. separated somewhere along their lengths, so I’m thinking that’s what happened here.
Anyone else experience something like this? Sort of an interesting problem, actually. I’ve never seen a tube “fail” this way.
Long story short, bad tube, and it was a relatively new JJ with less than 100 hours on it. Replacement tube worked fine. So did four more. Tried the original tube again, low gain again. Wiggling the tube in the socket caused no changes. Tried one of the replacement tubes again, back to normal again. Socket pins are tight and clean and have never caused me problems. No internal wiring shorts.
I’ve heard of broken grids, i.e. separated somewhere along their lengths, so I’m thinking that’s what happened here.
Anyone else experience something like this? Sort of an interesting problem, actually. I’ve never seen a tube “fail” this way.
Comment