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Yes, looks like Amperex from Heerlen Holland but if you want a bit more detail, read the etched details at the bottom of the tube in the first pic. This will give you the year of manufacture and also have a symbol indicating factory of manufacture. There are different variations of the design and it's best to get pairs that are at least of the same type/year.If you like these tubes you'll probably like the orange globe logo Amperex with either this internal design or the later A frame. They're a very good tube and don't demand the stratospheric price of others from the same manufacturer. jules
Sounds like you're getting good advice. Perhaps you could post a pic here when you get the tubes.If you also post the numbers/letters/symbols etched in the glass of the Amperex and the Mazda it should be possible to give you details such as factory of manufacture, year, month and batch. This often tells you more than the painted on stuff.jules
I hope this Mazda tube will be the one.
QuoteI hope this Mazda tube will be the one. In your dreams ! Part of the fun is trying a few tubes to find out what your preferences are. There do seem to be two camps of enthusiasts, the Philips/ Amperex fans and the Siemens/Telefunken supporters. If you like the Amperex sound, you might like to work your way up that chain. If you haven't already browsed your way through this site, have a look at what's available:https://www.tubeworld.com/7308.htmYou could pick up a pair of 1959 Philips SQ with D getters for a mere $750 or not!jules
While you're still experimenting, I'd suggest trying the 6N23P Russian tubes from the Voskhod factory (Rocket Logo), it is my favorite 6922/6DJ8/7308 variant in my integrated amp, with my current tube complement. I liked it better than the Holland Amperex A-Frames, Holland Amperex PQ's, USA Amperex PQ's, NOS Teslas, and Reflektor 6N23P-EV's that I've tried.Several tube vendors have them, or they are pretty available on eBay - and they are relatively cheap. May not work in your set up, but has been a pleasant surprise in mine.Jim C
Jim,What do these tubes sound like compared to the Amperex's or Tesla? What qualities do they possess with your amp?
Here are my quick impressions of the various 6DJ8 type tubes I have running in my Onix SP3. The other slots are:RFT ECC81 (NOS) (12AT7 type tube in place of a 12AX7)RFT 12AU7 (NOS)Reflektor 6P3S-E (NOS) (Coin base tubes 6L6 alternative, supposed to be from Reflektor factory, but there is no factory logo, so I'm sure)Voskhod 6n23p (NOS) - Natural realistic sound, treble through bass sound connected, soundstage is moderately wide and deep - again sounds appropriate.Amperex USA PQ 6922 (NOS) - Has more detail and air, wider soundstage, but maybe a little less deep. High end seems slightly grating, increased presence seems to make solo performers sound bigger than the perspective you'd expect. More impressive, but less natural. Overall thinner presentation, lower mids and bass sound a little tinny - less harmonics and resonances.Tesla E88CC (NOS - Not JJ) - Similar to the Vokshods, but with a smaller presentation both width & depth, and a little less high end "presence", cymbal crashes seem to end a little less naturally. Very nice and natural sounding, just slightly flat - not as involving as the Voskhods.Amperex Holland 6DJ8 A-Frame (Used in good shape) - Wide soundstage, but less depth, sounds a little unnatural on the size of instruments - "10 ft. wide piano", not a lot of presence or sense of space or air around vocalist and instruments, sounds a little flat. A little thin in the lower mids and bass. Very forward direct presentation - not romantic or lush. Sounds really good on some recordings, and just average on others.Amperex Holland PQ 6922 (Used - a little less matched pair than some of the others) - A little flat on the high frequencies, deep soundstage but some what unnatural some vocals too far back, keyboards too far forward. Width is much less than some of the others, doesn't seem to go much beyond the speakers. Again a very direct presentation, with less of a sense of space.Also seems to work better with some recordings more than others. Seemed to take longer to warm up and become "sweet" sounding than some of the others.Reflektor 6n23p-ev (NOS) - Transients seem a little crisper, sound is a slight bit grating and a little less smooth. Natural sounding presentation, soundstage depth and positioning feel correct - a little less wide than some of the others. Not a lot of presence or sense of harmonics & resonances.Melody 6922 (Chinese tubes that came with the amp) - Sounds like a scaled down presentation, less depth dynamics, and less able to separate the instruments accross the soundstage. A little laidback and not the same you are there presence as the others.After this quick test I'd rank them as follows:1) Voskhod 6n23p2) Amperex Holland 6DJ8 A-Frame3) Tesla E88CC4) Amperex Holland PQ 69225) Reflektor 6n23p-ev6) Amperex USA PQ 69227) Melody 6922These impressions and preferences are definitely different than when I was running the amp with GE 3MBP 5751 (NOS), RFT 12AU7 (NOS), and Valve Art 350B's (New Production) in the other slots, so how the tubes interact is clearly a factor.Jim C
Quote from: TJHUB on 22 Sep 2009, 02:57 pmJim,What do these tubes sound like compared to the Amperex's or Tesla? What qualities do they possess with your amp?I had posted this comparison in another thread, so I'll repost it here. The interesting thing is that in a previous configuration I had preferred the Amperex USA PQ 6922, so the synergy between tubes is pretty important.Quote from: bunnyma357 on 29 Aug 2009, 12:29 amHere are my quick impressions of the various 6DJ8 type tubes I have running in my Onix SP3. The other slots are:RFT ECC81 (NOS) (12AT7 type tube in place of a 12AX7)RFT 12AU7 (NOS)Reflektor 6P3S-E (NOS) (Coin base tubes 6L6 alternative, supposed to be from Reflektor factory, but there is no factory logo, so I'm sure)Voskhod 6n23p (NOS) - Natural realistic sound, treble through bass sound connected, soundstage is moderately wide and deep - again sounds appropriate.Amperex USA PQ 6922 (NOS) - Has more detail and air, wider soundstage, but maybe a little less deep. High end seems slightly grating, increased presence seems to make solo performers sound bigger than the perspective you'd expect. More impressive, but less natural. Overall thinner presentation, lower mids and bass sound a little tinny - less harmonics and resonances.Tesla E88CC (NOS - Not JJ) - Similar to the Vokshods, but with a smaller presentation both width & depth, and a little less high end "presence", cymbal crashes seem to end a little less naturally. Very nice and natural sounding, just slightly flat - not as involving as the Voskhods.Amperex Holland 6DJ8 A-Frame (Used in good shape) - Wide soundstage, but less depth, sounds a little unnatural on the size of instruments - "10 ft. wide piano", not a lot of presence or sense of space or air around vocalist and instruments, sounds a little flat. A little thin in the lower mids and bass. Very forward direct presentation - not romantic or lush. Sounds really good on some recordings, and just average on others.Amperex Holland PQ 6922 (Used - a little less matched pair than some of the others) - A little flat on the high frequencies, deep soundstage but some what unnatural some vocals too far back, keyboards too far forward. Width is much less than some of the others, doesn't seem to go much beyond the speakers. Again a very direct presentation, with less of a sense of space.Also seems to work better with some recordings more than others. Seemed to take longer to warm up and become "sweet" sounding than some of the others.Reflektor 6n23p-ev (NOS) - Transients seem a little crisper, sound is a slight bit grating and a little less smooth. Natural sounding presentation, soundstage depth and positioning feel correct - a little less wide than some of the others. Not a lot of presence or sense of harmonics & resonances.Melody 6922 (Chinese tubes that came with the amp) - Sounds like a scaled down presentation, less depth dynamics, and less able to separate the instruments accross the soundstage. A little laidback and not the same you are there presence as the others.After this quick test I'd rank them as follows:1) Voskhod 6n23p2) Amperex Holland 6DJ8 A-Frame3) Tesla E88CC4) Amperex Holland PQ 69225) Reflektor 6n23p-ev6) Amperex USA PQ 69227) Melody 6922These impressions and preferences are definitely different than when I was running the amp with GE 3MBP 5751 (NOS), RFT 12AU7 (NOS), and Valve Art 350B's (New Production) in the other slots, so how the tubes interact is clearly a factor.Jim C
Jim,Thanks for the repost. The Voskhods sound interesting from your description. I did a quick search and found a place selling them for $12.00. Does this sound right to you? For that cheap, I may just have to try one.