another tube question
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- robert(original)
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another tube question
i know i asked this before, and alot of people had really good input, but im about to buckle down and order some tubes(finally)
i need 2 pre-amp tubes,
and im looking for the cleanest possible sound.
i would love it if someone who has had actually experience with a certain brand or style could endorse them, rather than saying
"the website says they are the best!"
cuz we all know thats more hype than fact.
i need 2 pre-amp tubes,
and im looking for the cleanest possible sound.
i would love it if someone who has had actually experience with a certain brand or style could endorse them, rather than saying
"the website says they are the best!"
cuz we all know thats more hype than fact.
What Mike said, plus:
Yes, when it comes to the 12A_7 series of preamp tubes that most guitar amps use, you can usually substitute a lower-gain tube for a higher-gain tube. While reducing overdrive, this will also reduce overall volume. So I would not expect to get =louder= cleans, just that things will stay clean thru a bigger sweep of the dial.
I can't recall ever seeing one brand described as "cleaner" than another. One tube's clean tone or clipped tone may be better than another to a particular set of ears, but I'd expect the onset of clipping to happen at about the same place on the dial and at the same volume from tube to tube. Of course, here we're talking about two tubes of the same type (12AX7, for example), but different manufacturers.
As for manufacturer preference, I've been plenty happy with JJ tubes. That's not because I've compared too many other manufacturers. I've liked JJs and haven't needed to look further, that's all. (I do like JJs over Groove Tubes though.) By the way, JJ and some other manufacturers use the European numbering system for preamp tubes, where a 12AX7 is an ECC83 and so on. Same type tube, different name.
Yes, when it comes to the 12A_7 series of preamp tubes that most guitar amps use, you can usually substitute a lower-gain tube for a higher-gain tube. While reducing overdrive, this will also reduce overall volume. So I would not expect to get =louder= cleans, just that things will stay clean thru a bigger sweep of the dial.
I can't recall ever seeing one brand described as "cleaner" than another. One tube's clean tone or clipped tone may be better than another to a particular set of ears, but I'd expect the onset of clipping to happen at about the same place on the dial and at the same volume from tube to tube. Of course, here we're talking about two tubes of the same type (12AX7, for example), but different manufacturers.
As for manufacturer preference, I've been plenty happy with JJ tubes. That's not because I've compared too many other manufacturers. I've liked JJs and haven't needed to look further, that's all. (I do like JJs over Groove Tubes though.) By the way, JJ and some other manufacturers use the European numbering system for preamp tubes, where a 12AX7 is an ECC83 and so on. Same type tube, different name.
- robert(original)
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- Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 12:30 pm
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Yeah its for the cyber twin,
it could be that there is no difference really but im pretty sure that the tubes that i put in(no name, used, from the music shop) gave me a loss of clarity and sounded more over driven, i ended up changing alot of my prior settings.
also rick, that runs the local music shop says that for the most part he can't tell a difference unless he puts sovteks in his mic pre-amp rather than electro harmonix
it could be that there is no difference really but im pretty sure that the tubes that i put in(no name, used, from the music shop) gave me a loss of clarity and sounded more over driven, i ended up changing alot of my prior settings.
also rick, that runs the local music shop says that for the most part he can't tell a difference unless he puts sovteks in his mic pre-amp rather than electro harmonix
Here's a compaarison of the same tubes (12AX7) made by different manufacturers:
http://thetubestore.com/12ax7review.html
Apparently there is a difference, in both gain and voicing/EQ. My Marshall DSL came with cheap chinese tubes, and i swapped em out for JJs - huge difference, lower gain, loads more bass. so much nicer.
http://thetubestore.com/12ax7review.html
Apparently there is a difference, in both gain and voicing/EQ. My Marshall DSL came with cheap chinese tubes, and i swapped em out for JJs - huge difference, lower gain, loads more bass. so much nicer.
- dots
- BADmin (he/him)
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since i started using jj's, i haven't felt the need to, honestly. i don't hear anything lacking, their cost is way decent, and they last a long time. since every other tube i tried before them was lacking in at least one of those aspects, i'm really hesitant to switch since i found a company that does all three.Doog wrote:Yeah, I've been happy with JJs too, although I've not really shopped around.
The voicing/EQ differences I knew about. Not so much differences in gain (strength of tube's output signal relative to input signal)... tha'z interesting. I figured all manufacturers' tubes of a given type would have a similar gain. Maybe not, eh.aphasiac wrote:Here's a compaarison of the same tubes (12AX7) made by different manufacturers:
http://thetubestore.com/12ax7review.html
Apparently there is a difference, in both gain and voicing/EQ. My Marshall DSL came with cheap chinese tubes, and i swapped em out for JJs - huge difference, lower gain, loads more bass. so much nicer.
That being the case, it would make sense that if one tube maker's product has higher gain than another's, then when you stuff an amp full of their tubes, the additional gain in one stage would overdrive the next stage earlier because each stage is cranking out a stronger signal.
- euan
- partynerd!
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Aye. Watford Valves here test a lot of their valves for gain. So if you want a low gain tube they will sell you ones with gains of like <200, >200 and >250. I got the DR250s for my TT and one of the cryo treated. You can hear a sweetness and a reduction in noise from it. Which is helpful with the increased gain.
![Image](http://i.imgur.com/mrRGePF.png)
euan
Ok maybe there arent huge gain differences with the same tubes - I think its more like certain tubes break into harmonic distortion easier than others.filtercap wrote: The voicing/EQ differences I knew about. Not so much differences in gain (strength of tube's output signal relative to input signal)... tha'z interesting. I figured all manufacturers' tubes of a given type would have a similar gain. Maybe not, eh.
That being the case, it would make sense that if one tube maker's product has higher gain than another's, then when you stuff an amp full of their tubes, the additional gain in one stage would overdrive the next stage earlier because each stage is cranking out a stronger signal.