So I've seen this in the Rectifier manual and I was wondering if someone could help explain this statement better....
"NOTE: Due to the RECTO’S extreme gain potential, the highest regions of the GAIN Control may possibly push the pre-amp tubes past what they can handle, producing microphonic squealing. While we screen and test the tubes your amplifier was shipped with and the tubes in your amp passed our rigorous test, we can’t predict how the tubes will respond over time exposed to extreme gain settings. Your tubes are warrantied for a period of 6 months under normal use, but you can save yourself the present and future inconvenience of having to deal with annoying microphonic tube problems by simply using a little common sense...Don’t turn the Gain all the way up!"
So is there some sort of relationship where the higher the gain the shorter the tube life will be? Is there some way of measuring it where gain at 3 o clock will last 1000 hours and gain at 12 o clock will last 1500 hours?
"NOTE: Due to the RECTO’S extreme gain potential, the highest regions of the GAIN Control may possibly push the pre-amp tubes past what they can handle, producing microphonic squealing. While we screen and test the tubes your amplifier was shipped with and the tubes in your amp passed our rigorous test, we can’t predict how the tubes will respond over time exposed to extreme gain settings. Your tubes are warrantied for a period of 6 months under normal use, but you can save yourself the present and future inconvenience of having to deal with annoying microphonic tube problems by simply using a little common sense...Don’t turn the Gain all the way up!"
So is there some sort of relationship where the higher the gain the shorter the tube life will be? Is there some way of measuring it where gain at 3 o clock will last 1000 hours and gain at 12 o clock will last 1500 hours?