Yesterday, I lost a tube in my AVA FET Valve preamp. I have never experienced a tube failure in this preamp before, so even for me, there was a learning curve and to be honest, a little nervousness.
This failure began earlier in the day, with sounds that seemed to waffle about in the low frequencies, yes the tubes were playing their own music, I guess. I was suspicious, but I really was eyeing up another component up stream (another tubed phono preamp). Then at about 4pm yesterday afternoon, in the middle of a record, it became distortion city.
I de-activated the phono preamp and went to Frank's SS phono stage built into my FET Valve. The results were the same. I confirmed this with the FM tuner, the preamp was to blame for this.
Normally, I would have just changed tubes, but this distortion was in both channels, and that usually points towards a power supply (or a rectifier tube as in the Ultravalve power amp, so I decided to give Frank a call.
He too, thought for a moment that I should send the unit in, but I did mention tubes as the culprit and he commented that the heaters are in series and 1 tube failure may show up in both channels, heard as distortion.
Sure enough, 10 minutes later and it was rock and roll again. The new tubes fixed the problem (there are only 2 tubes in the FET Valve.
Now there are some rules about using tubed equipment. One is that tubes are going to fail. We don't know when or why or how, but they will die. Rule 2 is to always have a complete set on hand when this happens.
Perhaps this is maybe for newbies or for those thinking about purchasing tubed equipment, and the truth is, perhaps tubes are not for everyone, but the fact is life does go on after a tube failure.
The important part is to recognize that there is a problem and take care of it. Tubes can last for decades or a day (or less), it's the nature of the beast. But do not let the fear of "tube death" keep you from enjoying great 2 channel sound.
Wayner