While I was laid up, I decided to repair a chassis I had lying around and I got involved with some tubes. I was having heat issues and thought I was going to have to break out the testing equipment to read the MF values. (I was wrong.)
I started with some Sovtek 5881 tubes.
(Wow are these shitty, maybe others are decent but not these. They sound about as sterile as you can get. I know FENDER likes to use them in their amps stock, the question is why. If you have an amp using these, change them or you now know why your amp sounds like mud.)
From there I got the chance to use some RCA Victoria Metal Base 6L6's.
I understand that the metal base is due to the fact that they were for military applications.
(Wow, these sounded good. Not the loudest tubes in the world, but full of old time character. If you can find some of these that test out on your tube tester as new, try them...I liked them a lot. I just couldn't get a full compliment of them working in my amp.)
I got to see a regular fender replacement 5AR4 rectifier tube (RUBY).
(Chinese made junk and sounded like ass. It made my chassis act oddly and I removed it very quickly in favor of another 5U4. Some Chinese tubes are ok, but this wasn't one of them. AVOID AT ALL COSTS>. They are supposed to be a GZ34/5U4 replacement, just throw them in the garbage.)
I was sorting/testing and I came up with a RCA Victoria 5U4, a very nice tube. Again, testing is crucial. I found 3 and 1 tested off the chart. That's the one I used and it really made a noticeable difference.
In the end the real standout were JJ's Tubes, a newer version 6L6 that was loud, clean and really did exactly what you want them to do in a fender amp. The new JJ's (6L6) blew the doors off of all comers, even RCA/Svetlana vintage good testing tubes. (WHAAAATTT??@!?!?!?)
If you have an older amp that's acting up and you are considering a tube set change, try the JJ's. Now that I have heard the difference (I also got shocked 2x and burned so bad that I had solder in my thumb), the JJ's are the obvious choice.
Your ears will thank you..
I started with some Sovtek 5881 tubes.
(Wow are these shitty, maybe others are decent but not these. They sound about as sterile as you can get. I know FENDER likes to use them in their amps stock, the question is why. If you have an amp using these, change them or you now know why your amp sounds like mud.)
From there I got the chance to use some RCA Victoria Metal Base 6L6's.
I understand that the metal base is due to the fact that they were for military applications.
(Wow, these sounded good. Not the loudest tubes in the world, but full of old time character. If you can find some of these that test out on your tube tester as new, try them...I liked them a lot. I just couldn't get a full compliment of them working in my amp.)
I got to see a regular fender replacement 5AR4 rectifier tube (RUBY).
(Chinese made junk and sounded like ass. It made my chassis act oddly and I removed it very quickly in favor of another 5U4. Some Chinese tubes are ok, but this wasn't one of them. AVOID AT ALL COSTS>. They are supposed to be a GZ34/5U4 replacement, just throw them in the garbage.)
I was sorting/testing and I came up with a RCA Victoria 5U4, a very nice tube. Again, testing is crucial. I found 3 and 1 tested off the chart. That's the one I used and it really made a noticeable difference.
In the end the real standout were JJ's Tubes, a newer version 6L6 that was loud, clean and really did exactly what you want them to do in a fender amp. The new JJ's (6L6) blew the doors off of all comers, even RCA/Svetlana vintage good testing tubes. (WHAAAATTT??@!?!?!?)
If you have an older amp that's acting up and you are considering a tube set change, try the JJ's. Now that I have heard the difference (I also got shocked 2x and burned so bad that I had solder in my thumb), the JJ's are the obvious choice.
Your ears will thank you..
If you don't like what I say, you can
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLqsfwRvYtU
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLqsfwRvYtU