Originally posted by Steve Conner
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Bugera 6262 help!!
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The bias voltage/current is a matter of personal preference, there is no exact answer. If you play blues, you'll like a hotter bias than if you played thrash metal with a distortion box in front of the thing."Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"
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Pauly, bias that is way out of whack can burn up tubes, sure, but my point is that running the tubes at exactly 38.42ma, or some such is silly. Think of the air pressure in your car tires. SOme pressure like 35 pounds might be "optimal," but if they are sitting at 34 pounds, the car will not explode. In fact the pressure could be 37 on one tire, 34 in another, and 32 on the left rear. The car will still drive mom down to the store and back just fine.
There are bias levels that are way too hot and way too cold, but there is no "right here" correct spot, there is only a wide range of prefectly safe, reliable and acceptable bias levels.
The bias voltage is not a reliable measure of tube function. Get ten sets of tubes, set the bias to one voltage, and try each set of tubes. Each set will draw a different amount of current. And it is current, not bias voltage, that determines the tubes' dissipation. Dissipation is what determines whether a tube is going to overheat and melt down, not voltage.
Frankly, you can set it by ear pretty much. people holler bias so much, the marketing people at the amp makers throw it in. These test points are not some critical adjustment, they are a marketing tool. Set it in the middle range as mentioned earlier - it will be fine. The only way the realy know if the setting makes sense is to use a current measuring method.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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