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Nice post, Jim!I use self-biasing tube amps because I'm not so good with the multi meter!Best,John
I check the bias of each output tube. Once I make sure everything seems normal, I commence the music
Jim,IIRC, ARC drives their output tubes pretty hard. They sound great this way but don't last so long. You may actually only get 2k hours on them. Whats their recommended bias current?
BTW, you should always turn on the amp first and shut it down last! Very important....otherwise you can pop a tweeter....
65mA does sound high to me based solely on experienc. I'm used to KT88 amps that bias around 40-50mA. At any rate, I'd be very interested to see how many hours you do get from your tubes.
I only bias my amps once or twice a month because I'm lazy and they don't really seem to need it. Most changes seem to be due to voltage changes from the power conditioner - it would be nice if it would stay steady but nope...medium jim is right in that you get so used to the sound of your system that any change can be pretty noticeable.Trying to come to grips with a change in preamp is murder - it's close but not quite right...
Checking my tube bias is something I need to get in the habit of doing more regularly. Typically when I sit down to listen, I am ready to listen and don't want to mess with things. It really doesn't take all that long to do though. With my amp, the manual give a range to which the tubes need to be biased to. Is there any benefit to setting them at the lower/higher end of the range? Or is this just something the manufacturer does to make it easier for the end user to get the bias close for all tubes?