0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 4136 times.
While the pins do the same thing for a 6922 and the 6N1P, the current required for the filament circuit of the 6N1P is twice that of the 6922. You should not use the 6N1P unless you know for certain the filament power supply is rated for such a load.The 6922 has a filament draw of 0.3 amps. The 6DJ8 is 0.365. The 6N1P is 0.6
Not much by way of direct experience... this thread caught my attention because I just replaced the tube in my Nova.I find it interesting the specs for the Decco 2 call for a 6N1P, while the Nova has a 6922. My original, stock tube went bad, and I replaced it with a vintage 6DJ8. Major sonic improvement.
I have tube rolled every piece of tube gear I have bought and found improvement. Your thread was one that I had read and was really hoping that a different tube could tailor the sound of the Decco 2 to my liking. It seemed so strange to me that a 6DJ8 didn't work in my application, especially after reading your impressions of swapping the tube. I'm now at the point of trying to figure out what I want to do with the Decco 2 long term. Keep it or not.
I believe that only one vendor made the 6N1P, Vostok factory I believe. Others, including myself, have replaced the 6N1P with 6CG7/6FQ7 with excellent results. It will work as a direct drop-in replacement.Ron
I recently picked up a Decco 2 and decided to try a couple of different tubes in it to tailor it to my tastes. I see that 6N1P tube are in the same family of the 6DJ8 so I picked up a tube at a local shop to try out. As soon as I turned it on, there was lots of distortion and crackling so I shut it off to avoid any damage to the unit. The shop said they tested the tube, but I figured one may have slipped through. I have some other 6DJ8's laying around so I tried one of those and had the exact same issue. So now I am wondering if it is the tubes I am putting in it or the unit itself. What might be causing this or what am I overlooking?
As I try to do a little math here... The tube I used as a replacement has a filament drawing 21.67% _more_ (ugh... I wonder if I need to sweat that...) than the original (...)
Typically an under driven tube does not fail quicker but in fact lasts longer than if it is driven normally, BUT... in many cases an under driven tube doesn't sound as good as it might in a circuit that is optimzed for that tube. So if say the plate voltage were run at 40 to 80 volts less than the data sheet calls, and the grid and bias voltages follow normal application parameters (keeping anode and cathode currents under control as well) will help a tube run cooler, still be well optimized for the circuit, and operate for a longer period before needing replacement.Does that make sense to you and help a bit?