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A general question; Why is it that NOS tubes sound sooo much better then tubes made today? Regardless of the tubes, from EL84s to 12AX7s, it has been my experience that the improvement in sound almost approaches the outrages prices charged for NOS tubes. Time and again, merely by putting in a NOS tube(s), it has taken a component that I was mildly interested in to that that sounded spectacular.
Kinda' like vinyl records today...there's only 12 plants pressing vinyl and demand outweighs supply. In too many instances, today's records are plagued by warps and bad pressing quality. Back in the 70's and 80's...that phenomenon was a rarity. John
Somebody once told me that the plating process they used back then was different. There was virtually no restrictions as to the chemicals and/or heavy metals they could use for the process ... I also don't know how true this is, but it sounds like a logical reason.Brad
It would seem that with modern science, that mixture could easily be determined.
Not to steal the thread, but SAY WHAT!!!!!! Dynaflex, bad fill, remix,.... Pressing quality for most of the major plants was awful in the late 70's early 80's. What do you think drove most people to early adoption of CD? Sure there were some labels that forced quality pressings (ECM comes to mind), but I've got a bunch of noisy WBs, Capitols, MCAs... This was pretty much the sole reason for the popularity of early MoFi and Nautilus.
There are a handful of ways to determine components of metallic alloys both destructively and nondestructively. The most common NDE (nondestructive evaluation) technique is using XRF (X-ray fluorescence). I think the unknowns would be the alloy production processes such as type of heat treatment and time / temperature of treatment, etc…Brad