If you set the bias hot you will have less headroom before your power tubes start saturating
That is true, I think that there is a lot of info on the net about the bias but... I will try to explain one more time.
The bias point is the the exactly point where your amp is working, ok? When you refers to a bias point you are refering a voltage and a current, if you don´t say both of them you are not getting the exactly point, ok the bias point is in general the voltage that drops on the tube between the anode and the cathode and the current is the total amount of current that travels from cathode to anode, ok? well, the bias point is EVER a DC parameter, so we fixed the bias point with a continous voltage supply, and we isolate that continuous voltage with coupling and decoupling caps, ok??? A bias point also need to be refered into the graphics of the datasheet tube, you have two kind of graphics, the input refered to the grid and the output refered to the anode and cathode, ok??? so when a dude takes you a few dollars of adjusting the bias I´m totally sure that he isn´t fixing the exactly point, because that point needs a voltage and current measure and that is a good job for an entirely day. If you are adjusting the two parameters you are fixing the maximun power consumption of the tube, in continous the power is rated as P=VxI
So why is important to get a good bias point??? For several reasons:
- First of one only some fets transistors are able to conduct currents without any DC power consumption, all other electron devices needs a bit of DC power to polarizate and begin to work, now imagine that we have a sinusoidal wave, oscillating near 0 volts, if it is very small or even it is higher if we don´t have a DC feeding the tubes, tubes will began to work when the sinusoidal is strong enough to feed the tube to work, so what a nonsense isn´t it? we are trying to amplify our sinus and it is wasted to powered the tube, so the tube need and external feeds independly from the audio, so what happens if our DC is very low or the amp si so cold, well the effect is that DC is not enough to the tube to begins to work by itselfs so it takes part of the AC signal to feed it, so the matter is that low levels sinus or high level ( but when the sinus is getting to zero voltage ) is not correctly amplified, and generate a nasty noise, that issue is called zero crossing distortion and it generates a little square waveform that as I could remember from my university classrooms the fourier transform of that signal is a sinc with all the odd harmonics creating a thd jungle
- The second reason is for a power matter in that reason we could link with the first reason. When you fixed the bias point you are fixing the total amount of wattage that the amp could amplify.
ok now I will try to comment some ideas to check the bias, as I said fixing a bias need to get two parameters, the voltage and the current, for that reason there are several methods based on current and voltage, ok current methods aren´t recomended by me for several reasons, first of all you need to take some external elements and install inside the amp, second you need to measure the current that is hazardous than reading a voltage, ok I usually used two methods, first I take the amp and connect it into a real resistor of 15 ohms/ 50 watts to load the amp, then I connect the scope to the resistor and generate a sinusoidal wave with my function generator then I try to see what is happening on the scope near the 0 volts. With that method I ensure the zero cross distortion. the next test I usually use is to take the circuit and solve the equation of the tube, the equation of the tube is easy to solve you begin on the dc power supply and you end on the grid, so I read some values of voltage on the anode resistor, on the cathode resistor and I get with the equation the anode-cathode voltage drop and the current, next solving the equation and going to manufacturer datasheet I fixed the negative grid voltage, fixing the negative grid voltage you are modding the bias point because all the circuit depends of itself and the grid is one of the terms of the equation so if I move the bias trim the grid voltage changes, well with those two methods that i use I only found one amp that really needs to have a fine tunning of bias point they are Marshall amps.
Usually the manufacturer design and calculates the bias point thinking that a vast of tubes could be mounted without any bias change, so for that reason the isolate the bias matter with a good electronics design a allows the owner to change a bit with a ridicolous trim pot that have a little value compared with the other resistor on the circuit, well marshall is one of the manufacturers that gets a higher value pot.
So there are several class of amplification class A, B, C... through H the class of an amp gives you some ideas about how is designed, the mainly purposes the power, the bias point etc... the class of the amp is one of the mainly things that you need to know when you are buying it, knowing about the classes you could guess what are you trading.
So going now to your question what is hot and what is cold, well, as I tried to explain we have two graphics, now we will talk about the output graphic, so the output graphic rates the power of the amp ( voltage and current through the tube ) with several grid voltages, so now did you imagine which is the next step??? did you real want to learn how to calculate a bias point with that graphics???? ok I propose to everybody who wants to learn to make an easy drawning exercise. I have some datasheets of tubes so I could upload it like an image and you could download, then I will try to solve the easiest as possible a real bias point, with that exercise I´m really sure that you will learn more that another biblic thread, with that exercise you will understand perfectly what is hot and cold. So anyone interested???