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Does it hurt a tube amp, to leave it on standby mode for a couple hours?
Posted on 4/25/23 at 11:38 pm
Posted on 4/25/23 at 11:38 pm
I'm bad about that.
Posted on 4/26/23 at 8:47 am to auggie
Nope, auggie, not bad for it, it's actually good for it. You could argue it spends tube life, but standby is like a car idling. You'll run out of gas, sure, but it takes a lot longer than if you're driving it.
On the subject of "good for it" ... the worst thing you can do for any tube amp but especially old vintage ones, is NOT use it.
Collectors, infrequent players, or owners of amps that are rarely used, should fire up tube amps once weekly and let them process current for 10 minutes or so.
If you understand why you periodically start and run rarely used motors, to deter freeze up from misuse, get lumpy oil, varnishing in the fuel line and carb ... firing up an old tube amp is the same principle.
On the subject of "good for it" ... the worst thing you can do for any tube amp but especially old vintage ones, is NOT use it.
Collectors, infrequent players, or owners of amps that are rarely used, should fire up tube amps once weekly and let them process current for 10 minutes or so.
If you understand why you periodically start and run rarely used motors, to deter freeze up from misuse, get lumpy oil, varnishing in the fuel line and carb ... firing up an old tube amp is the same principle.
Posted on 4/26/23 at 9:05 am to TheFretShack
My understanding is that standby vs. fully on is just the standby cuts off a high voltage circuit in the amp. The low voltage circuit that powers the tube heating elements stays on though. The intention is to not turn that high voltage on until the tubes are warmed. So the car analogy is like a block heater prior to starting up. Putting it in standby afterwards blocks the high voltage again, which cuts out the amplified current, therefore no sound. But the tubes are still staying heated.
I will admit I don't have personal experience. Just an engineer with some (very little) electrical background knowledge that nerds out and watches a lot of youtube videos
. I was curious when my tube amp didn't have standby and saw that some people added it afterwards. Wanted to know why.
I will admit I don't have personal experience. Just an engineer with some (very little) electrical background knowledge that nerds out and watches a lot of youtube videos
Posted on 4/26/23 at 9:06 am to TheFretShack
Thanx man, I use it a lot, it sounds so good. I never really crank it up much though.
I have left it on standby all day before because I got busy with other things.
I forgot about it last night for a couple hours, and that prompted me to ask.
I have left it on standby all day before because I got busy with other things.
I forgot about it last night for a couple hours, and that prompted me to ask.
Posted on 5/5/23 at 2:44 pm to auggie
Standby is just the tube heaters, as Jonathan said. Basically, you’re just warming them up for the show. After you remove standby out of the circuit, you are idling. With the volume down, you would set the bias at this point. When you plug in and play, that is full throttle on the tubes.
You could leave the amp on indefinitely without running a signal through it, and you’re still good. In standby, it’s just keeping the tubes warmed up.
The reason for all of this is to keep from stripping electrons from the cathode/s prematurely which degrades the life of the tubes.
You could leave the amp on indefinitely without running a signal through it, and you’re still good. In standby, it’s just keeping the tubes warmed up.
The reason for all of this is to keep from stripping electrons from the cathode/s prematurely which degrades the life of the tubes.
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