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I just re-tubed my PSE preamp, and it, well, sounds tubby, rolled-off, tubey. Not a lot better than before I replaced its 15 year old tubes.It's been a few years since I listened to it critically with good tubes, but I don't remember it sounding like this. I've gotten used to a very nice solid state pre, and then when that died, listened straight from the DAC to the amps, so maybe this is what it always sounded like, but it doesn't seem right and I'm not that crazy about it.So my question is--do 6922s (these are 7DJ8s) need time to warm up, burn in, or otherwise sound right?
Does anyone have transconductance curves for the 6922/6DJ8 vs. the 7DJ8 as a function of heater voltage? It seems with that information it would be pretty easy to figure out what I'm giving up in performance by running the heater voltage below its designed level.
Ahhh.The data sheet say LESS then 5% ! So it is better not to use 6v but a little higher. But, to be honest, if you use 6V the tube would not die in a very short time i guess.
I read though the entire thread and I noticed no one mentioned the AC power line voltage feeding the preamp. IF, the manufacture's recommended AC line voltage for the preamp is, say, 115Vac and the users house mains voltage is 123Vac what would the preamp's power transformer heater secondary winding voltage measure?
My experience with NOS tubes such as early to middle 1960s 6922/7308, Amperex PQ white label, Siemens all grey plate CCa/7308, and Telefunken 6922/7308 tubes is they need about 50 to 75 hours of burn in time to achieve their full sonic potential.As always YMMV. My preamp is a Sonic Frontiers Line One.As for new production tubes such as EH 6922, that I use in my Audio Research VT50 amp, burn in time is around 25 to 30 plus hours. Jmho a 6dj8 would never last as long, hours of life, as the 6922 tube in the ARC VT50 amp.//I read though the entire thread and I noticed no one mentioned the AC power line voltage feeding the preamp. IF, the manufacture's recommended AC line voltage for the preamp is, say, 115Vac and the users house mains voltage is 123Vac what would the preamp's power transformer heater secondary winding voltage measure? If the DC power supply is not well regulated what would the DC plate voltage measure on the 6dj8/7dj8 tube? How hard did the designer of the preamp drive the recommended 6922 tube?//I ran a test using a used EH 6922 tube. For the test a Hickok 6000a tube tester was used.First I checked the tube for its' Mutual Conductance at the 6.3V Filament setting for the tube.Test results,section 1) 5300 MICROMHOS (where 5500 is as new)section 2) 5200 "Next I set the Filament voltage selector switch to 5VTest results,Section 1) 4100 MICROMHOSSection 2) 4500 "As the tube aged, hours of use, I would image the spread would be greater.For what it's worth there is a tube life test that can be preformed on a used tube where the filament voltage is decreased in the same manner as I did in my test above. Only difference is the tube bias dial setting is higher for the Tube Good / Bad test.Jim
For what it's worth there is a tube life test that can be preformed on a used tube where the filament voltage is decreased in the same manner as I did in my test above. Only difference is the tube bias dial setting is higher for the Tube Good / Bad test.
There is no problem supplying 6.0 volts on a 6.3 volt filament in virtually all cases. However, there are extenuating circumstances involving heavy plate current and increased frequencies into the high MHz, and depending upon the tube, in which transit time becomes a problem. 1) Consider that the plate current draw means electrons leaving the cathode, which cools the cathode. (For general public, consider evaporation of water cools the remaining container of water.) The lower the plate current, the less the cathode is cooled by electrons leaving. I run my tubes in the 11A less than typical plate current.Secondly, only have two inputs from customers; they ran the 11A 24/7 for 3 1/2 years before replacing the tubes, translating to approximately 28,000 hours of tube life.CheersSteve
What do you (or those costumers) mean with tube life? To know the tube life you have to measure the tube ( S, Ri, mu etcetera)
Under normal conditions a valve should be operated with its filament or heater at the recommended voltage; in the case of an oxide coated valve it is possible to have fluctuations of the order of 10% up or down without seriously affecting the life or characteristics of the valve........If the filament or cathode is operated continuously with a higher voltage than that recommended, some of the coating material is evaporated and permanently lost, thus reducing the life of the valve. Moreover, some of this vapour tends to deposit on the grid and give rise to what is known as grid emission when the grid itself emits electrons and draws current commonly known as negative grid current.......If the filament or heater is operated for long periods at reduced voltages, the effect is a reduction in emission, but no damage is generally done to the valve unless the cathode currents are sufficient to exhaust the "space charge." Low cathode temperature is, therefore, permissible provided that the anode current is reduced in the proper proportion.
Simply perception, which in the end is all that counts. Other customers probably do not power the 11A 24/7, so it is impossible to determine the hours. I should probably power my personal 11A on 24/7, so I can measure the parameters for moredata. I will mark/favorite this string and reply again in the coming years with my results. This string will be long gone.From the RCA Radiotron Designers Handbook, 26 engineers, 1960:As noted above, under normal conditions, +/- 10% will not deplete the space charge (typical plate current is generally listed in the specifications sheet), and with less than typical plate current, 5% is just fine. 17% or more is another matter that must be weighed carefully. At less filament voltage, the carbonates evaporate less, so grid contamination is less over time, a plus.Directly heated tubes with common cathode/filaments are a different story. Thoriated tungsten filaments with plus 3% increase voltage will increase emission by some 20%, while reducing cathode life by some 50%. Conversely, lowering the filament voltage by 3% will decrease emission by some 20%, but extend cathode life by some 50%. (Eimac Care and Feeding of Power Grid Tubes)CheersSteve
My concerns are the safety in case a catastrophic failure of the valve occurs, the less good performance are acceptable to me.
In Europe, where i live, the equivalent for an 6922 is the E88CC.The E88CC is a long life tube, 10000 hours, datasheets (Telefunken, Siemens, Philips, Mullard) say 6,3V +/- 5%. The Rca 6922 datasheet say 6,3V +/- 10% but not that it is a long life tube, so a normal life of 500-1000hours (after that performance is less good) Ofcourse it is possible that the tube stays alive 20000 hours and 40000 hours maybe too but not with good performance and that is not what we want. At least people who care about good performance don't like that.
Good points Jim. I would venture a guess that one of two reasons apply.1) The filament voltages are regulated. I do in my preamps, but amplifiers, expecially the output tube, this is a consideration that needs to be addressed.2) Some, many, do not understand the problem.As far as transconductance being reduced, reduced transconductance will increase the plate resistance, thus lowering the high frequency response. Whether the reduction in hfr will affect one's perception will depend upon several factors.CheersSteve
Steve said:As far as transconductance being reduced, reduced transconductance will increase the plate resistance, thus lowering the high frequency response. Whether the reduction in hfr will affect one's perception will depend upon several factors.
The only reason I am posting now is to prevent the public from being misled with false information. Please reread my last posts, as I have some 58 years actual experience (45 years since college), including college lab and my own personal lab, and have explained some basic aspects of cathode operating principles. CheersSteveps. Please pardon me if I have crossed the line of civility.
JimMy apologies to the OP for getting off topic.
Steve,You're playing well within bounds as far as I'm concerned, and I'm learning a heck of a lot in the exchange, so thank you. AC
Jim,I don't have any issue with you tagging onto this thread, but you might want to start another thread just so folks with a similar question in the future might be able to more easily find the information.AC
Could you please explain why? Differences in Plate resistance? Ohm's law?So if working from that assumption, closely matched mutual conductance / transconductance of each section of the tube made the difference?
Also RCA uses +/- 5% for Vf and allow 10% IF less then 2% of it's operation time.All the old normal tubes from my Tektronix or Hp equipment i tested have not so good specifications anymore (<<60%). So i won't count on a very long life for a normal tube. Maybe a bit better then the 500-1000 i say before but after 3000h it is really a lot less then it was new.
If I understand your questions, why are not dual triodes matched more closely and what is ohms law.I think this equation will help. First, some definitions. Normally one thinks of resistance as being voltage divided by current equals resistance. This works for both AC (RMS) and DC voltages and resistors. The equations are:E is voltageI is currentR is resistanceE = I X R. X = timesI = E / R / = divided byR = E / IWith tubes things are a little different. Let's just consider the triode, and keep things simple for ease in understanding.Gm is the change in plate current with a change in grid to cathode voltage,,,, with a constant plate to cathode voltage. If we keep the plate to cathode voltage constant, and alter the grid to cathode voltage, the plate current will change.Mu (amplification factor) is the change in plate to cathode voltage with a change in grid to cathode voltage,,,, with constant plate current. (Let's keep it simple.) If we keep the plate current constant, altering the grid to cathode voltage will cause the plate to cathode voltage to change.Rp is the change in plate to cathode voltage with a change in plate current,,,, with a constant grid to cathode voltage. With a constant grid to cathode voltage, if we change the plate to cathode voltage, the plate current will change.(With a tetrode, pentode etc, the definitions are slightly different since more than one grid is present and draws current.)Mu (amplification factor) is theoretical gain. Gm is transconductance. Rp is plate resistance of a tube section, triode, tetrode, pentode etc.Mu = Gm X Rp. X = times Gm = Mu/Rp. / = divide byRp = Mu/Rp.As one parameter changes, the other two as well, although it is possible for two parameters to change and the third to remain constant.As far as sections not matching, let's check out the variables. Again, just for a triode. 1. The plate structure between sections may be sheped slightly different.2. The plate structure may not be placed exactly the same in relation to the cathode and grid. This variance may be both horizontal and verticle.3. The machine winding the grid wire for each section has tolerances, thus the grid wire for each triode section can and usually is a little different. Slightly different spacing between each turn of wire.4. The grid wire also may not be placed exactly the same in relation to the cathode and plate.5. The cathode material may not be homogeneous across the nickel support.6. The cathode material may be slightly warped, thus the relationship between each cathode to grid and plate may be slightly different.7. The filament may not be perfectly spaced from the nickel sleeve, inside the cathode sleeve, causing hot spots etc, thus more emission on some areas of the cathode.8. The filament itself may have hot spots, thus heating certain portions of the cathode more than other portions.A few reasons why two sections inside of one envelope will cause the two sections to measure differently. I hope I understood and properly answered your question(s) Jim.CheersSteve
Steve said:If I understand your questions, why are not dual triodes matched more closely and what is ohms law.