Welcome to the forum.engange said:Hey
Was wondering if someone tried a Tung Sol or JJ set and can describe the Rectifier sound vs the mesa tubes.
domct203 said:Welcome to the forum.engange said:Hey
Was wondering if someone tried a Tung Sol or JJ set and can describe the Rectifier sound vs the mesa tubes.
I'm guessing that you are referring to preamp tubes only?
The current Mesa 12AX7's are JJ's.
Overall I find the Tung-Sol a bit clearer in the lows, and the JJ smoother in the highs. I like the Tung-Sol in V1 and a JJ in V2.
Dom
afu said:Preamp tubes should last a long, long time. Change the power tubes and see if the problem persists. In the preamp, V3 and V4 may fail due to high voltages on the cathode, because the high voltage cathode follower circuits, but the power tubes are usually the culprit.
With the amp still attached to a speaker, run the FX send to a unit you can hear with headphones or to another amp's return socket. If it works fine, you don't necessarily have to retube the preamp.
V1 is usually always the input gain stage in a tube amp.engange said:afu said:Preamp tubes should last a long, long time. Change the power tubes and see if the problem persists. In the preamp, V3 and V4 may fail due to high voltages on the cathode, because the high voltage cathode follower circuits, but the power tubes are usually the culprit.
With the amp still attached to a speaker, run the FX send to a unit you can hear with headphones or to another amp's return socket. If it works fine, you don't necessarily have to retube the preamp.
Thank you
I replaced the V2 and it start working fine, I'm just afraid that every few weeks now Ill have an issue with the amp and would need to start dealing with it, thought replacing everything.
Power amp tubes are v1 and v2?
engange said:afu said:Preamp tubes should last a long, long time. Change the power tubes and see if the problem persists. In the preamp, V3 and V4 may fail due to high voltages on the cathode, because the high voltage cathode follower circuits, but the power tubes are usually the culprit.
With the amp still attached to a speaker, run the FX send to a unit you can hear with headphones or to another amp's return socket. If it works fine, you don't necessarily have to retube the preamp.
Thank you
I replaced the V2 and it start working fine, I'm just afraid that every few weeks now Ill have an issue with the amp and would need to start dealing with it, thought replacing everything.
Power amp tubes are v1 and v2?
afu said:engange said:afu said:Preamp tubes should last a long, long time. Change the power tubes and see if the problem persists. In the preamp, V3 and V4 may fail due to high voltages on the cathode, because the high voltage cathode follower circuits, but the power tubes are usually the culprit.
With the amp still attached to a speaker, run the FX send to a unit you can hear with headphones or to another amp's return socket. If it works fine, you don't necessarily have to retube the preamp.
Thank you
I replaced the V2 and it start working fine, I'm just afraid that every few weeks now Ill have an issue with the amp and would need to start dealing with it, thought replacing everything.
Power amp tubes are v1 and v2?
By the way you stated that, it sounds like you replaced an EL84. If so:
it's best to replace them as pairs which are matched to each other by a tube supplier (or a person with a tube tester), specifically buying the Mesa brand if it's under warranty, because it is a Class AB power amp. This means one tube is amplifying the sound while the other is not and then it switches states to the opposite condition. With Mesa's type of fixed bias, the tubes need to at least be matched for plate current (PC#) so they turn on and off opposite of each other at the same time and have about the same basic sound, since it cannot be adjusted.
It probably will not hurt it if it's slightly mismatched for a short time, but it will extend the life of the tubes and sound better when they are matched. Tubes change their electrical characteristics over time. Even if you had a single tube replaced with the same PC and TR numbers, the old, remaining tube may not be at those specs if enough time has been put into using it. Short of testing the good tube and matching it to another tube on the same test equipment, a pair is the only way to go for the long term.
chris_barnes said:Hello guys. I am new to the forum, too. I recently bought a used DR and am thinking of retubing it. It is currently with MESA tubes, so I was thinking of getting the preamp tubes Doug suggests (from a local dealer here) and Tung-Sol EL34B's for the power amp.
I am looking to tighten the lows and enhance the mids. I used to play a 5150 so now I wish to have my Mesa cut a bit better through the band mix.
Please share your thoughts.
chris_barnes said:Thanks! I run the bass around 9 o'clock and the mids around 12, will play with the settings a bit more once I change the tubes.
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