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Carbon composition is the best for low inductance, which is important in grid stoppers which are effective at hundreds of MHz. They are noisy, but only if they have DC current through them, and the noise is proportional to the resistance. So as grid stoppers (no current) and as plate stoppers (small resistance, and located after the first signal amplification stage so that noise is 30dB less important) they are OK. In both applications, drift of the resistance is not important. Plate resistors are usually metal film, which is generally very quiet even with DC current, and they are also readily available in 1% or better precision. They do have a bit of inductance, but it's not significant at audio frequencies. We also use them in the RIAA equalization network, where precision and low noise are important. We avoid them when small amounts of inductance are important. Wirewound is the quietest, but usually has the most inductance. We us them in power supplies where the small inductance helps isolate diode switching transients and power line RFI noise. Metal oxide is noisy and usually imprecise, but they are very sturdy (withstand voltage transients and momentary overloads without damage) so they make good power supply bleeders where the large parallel capacitance can shunt the noise to ground.
Yeah, resistors can make a difference, but not across the board.
thanks for the input men. The resistors in question are located at the tube sockets. charles
My advice? Use the lowest-noise resistors you can get your hands on. I personally prefer nude Vishay Zs:http://www.texascomponents.com/Click around this website until you find "Audio Resistors." Z-foils are it.
Do you know the prices? i'm definitely going to use some of these in the OPS of a new power amp.
Yes Charles, as mentioned above resistors do make a sonic difference. Plate, grid, cathode resistors need to be checked VS not only the design but also VS capacitors used etc. For instance, if a "dark" sounding capacitor is used with "dark" sounding resistors, the sound will be influenced. Conversely, if a bright sounding capacitor is used with a "sparkly" sounding resistor, the sound could be fatigueing.Hope this helps.