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In Reply to: RE: NOS AS7s in MA-1s? posted by ACHiPo on July 27, 2021 at 10:31:05
This subject has been well addressed before and the simple answer is that you will not likely get a recommendation for anything but the Russian Sovteks and the Chinese Sinos that Ralph recommends for his amps. There's really nothing else to use so these amps just don't lend themselves to tube rolling, as far as the power tubes are concerned anyways. In the thread below, acres verde mentioned reliability issues with the Chinese output tubes, so there's one recommendation to stick with the Sovteks.
That said, if you are using other tubes that work, won't hurt the amp, and you like the sound of, then go for it. As far as mixing and matching, I would distribute them evenly between the two "sides" of the amp. With the original chassis, each "side" is made up of a row of 7 tubes.
I recently numbered all of my tubes (including spares), measured each triode, entered the data on a spreadsheet, and sorted the data so that I could as best as humanly possible, evenly distribute my best tubes between the amps and then between the two rows within each amp. This way each of the four total rows essentially have, as close as possible, the same collective value. Did I hear any change by doing this? Nope, but I still feel good about it :-)
voolston - audiophile by day, music lover by night
Follow Ups:
Vooston,
Thank you. That is the information I was looking for. I'll stick to the still-affordable Sino power tubes. The Russian Sovteks have gotten crazy expensive.
Oh, and hats off to your OCD. I actually thought about the same approach, only rather than a spreadsheet I figured I'd use a silver Sharpie on the base. I don't have a tube tester, but it's easy to get confused even with the M60's 8 tubes let alone the 14 of the MA1s.
Evan
A silver sharpie would work fine if you want to number the tubes and maintain some kind of log. I put little pieces of masking tape on the tube bases to write numbers on, but was careful to put them on the "back" side so I don't have to see them as my OCD side would not like that! I did recently find that I had about five dead tubes in one monoblock and never knew it by listening, so I wouldn't stress too much about matching. I just went through the effort out of principle (and because I had access to a tube tester). I understand one way to know if something off is to simply check the dc offset and bias. If the previously set values are off, then likely there is a weak or dead tube to blame. As acres verde also mentioned, whenever there is a problem, it is ALWAYS a tube issue.
voolston - audiophile by day, music lover by night
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