Solid State Tubes
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Solid State Tubes
I wonder how these sound. 6L6 and 12AX7 solid state replacements.
http://eshop.amtelectronics.com/6l6-12a ... tubes.html
http://eshop.amtelectronics.com/6l6-12a ... tubes.html
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A similar device called a Fetron was available 40 years ago. Mesa Boogie used them for a while. This link has some good info.
http://www.philipstorr.id.au/radio/eleven/fetron.htm
http://www.philipstorr.id.au/radio/eleven/fetron.htm
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If the sound is acceptable, the benefit is durability. Guitar amps take a lot of abuse. tubes<sup>*</sup> can break, and they deteriorate over time. I know people who replace their tubes every 2 or 3 years, claiming that they wear out like strings.
Like light bulbs, the filaments in tubes fail eventually. A solid state replacement wouldn't have that problem. You wouldn't need to carry spares in your pack-a-seat.
<sup>*</sup>We Americans call them tubes, but they are called valves in other countries.
Like light bulbs, the filaments in tubes fail eventually. A solid state replacement wouldn't have that problem. You wouldn't need to carry spares in your pack-a-seat.
<sup>*</sup>We Americans call them tubes, but they are called valves in other countries.
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Do they need to warm up like tubes do?
How does the cost compare with tubes ?
There are hundreds of different tubes out there, and some equipment has had to be discarded because the tubes have blown and replacements are not available. What sort of range will eventually become available?
Will it be limited to just 6L6 and 12AX7 ?
How does the cost compare with tubes ?
There are hundreds of different tubes out there, and some equipment has had to be discarded because the tubes have blown and replacements are not available. What sort of range will eventually become available?
Will it be limited to just 6L6 and 12AX7 ?
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I honestly think that the difference between solid-state and tube amps is insignificant...until they're pushed into distortion. It's only then that tubes seem to have an advantage, but that is even coming to an end with modeling amps that can emulate tube distortion sounds. Look, I played tube amps for 25 years. I designed my own preamps and I modified amps for fun. But all that came to an end when the U.S.A. went out of the tube business. Foreign tubes just didn't have the quality and consistency, and very soon, NOS tubes became way overpriced. Of course, the old amps were easy to fix and modify, but that soon became less and less fun because the "heart" of the amp, the tubes, became more and more "iffy".
Sure, it's just an opinion, but it's an opinion that will soon be spreading. Tube amps are expensive to buy and maintain, and their advantages for normal pedal steel demands (clean power, headroom, and practicality) are mostly a myth, IMHO.
Sure, it's just an opinion, but it's an opinion that will soon be spreading. Tube amps are expensive to buy and maintain, and their advantages for normal pedal steel demands (clean power, headroom, and practicality) are mostly a myth, IMHO.
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Weber makes a rectifier tube replacement, that I imagine follows similar principles, since the early 2000s. Not much buzz or praise. Most I've read say they're not up to replacing real tubes.
And for an older attempt at replacing tubes:
http://www.philipstorr.id.au/radio/eleven/fetron.htm
And for an older attempt at replacing tubes:
http://www.philipstorr.id.au/radio/eleven/fetron.htm
Last edited by Miguel Saldana on 26 Apr 2013 12:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Stephen Cowell
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I've never had a tube filament fail... it's always they get gassy, or the cathode wears out (low emission)... or they get noisy/microphonic. One thing tubes *won't* do is get zapped... which is something transistors/IC's are very susceptible to. The filament does draw a lot of current... the hot-cold cycles are wear and tear on the tube.b0b wrote:Like light bulbs, the filaments in tubes fail eventually. A solid state replacement wouldn't have that problem. You wouldn't need to carry spares in your pack-a-seat.
If we get nano technology to come through for cathode chemistry the sky's the limit... they're already making micro-tubes with buckytube cathodes... diamond is another possibility, a great electron emitter. I'm just glad I can get decent new tubes, for a while there it was touch-and-go.
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There is a SS replacement for a 5U4 tube that is supposed to eliminate the sag effect from the tube and get more headroom. If you replace preamp & power tubes with a ss tube replacement, wouldn't you basically have a ss amp? Unless the ss replacements emulate tube characteristics? Doesn't the FET technology do the same? It also seems FET has fallen by the wayside.
I just replaced a SS rectifier from a boutique amp with a 5U4 rectifier tube and it sounds much warmer IMO.
I just got a Fender Xcelsior 13 watt tube amp to leave at a friends house along with a guitar & lap steel. I hope the tubes hold up because this amp for jamming is a sweet sound.
I just replaced a SS rectifier from a boutique amp with a 5U4 rectifier tube and it sounds much warmer IMO.
I just got a Fender Xcelsior 13 watt tube amp to leave at a friends house along with a guitar & lap steel. I hope the tubes hold up because this amp for jamming is a sweet sound.
My Mesa/Boogie Maverick (prototype) has both rectifiers, with a switch. I don't like the tube rectifier for steel. The solid state diodes have more headroom. That's how it feels on the attack, anyway.
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It is well known that 6-string guitarists (depending on genre, of course) like tube rectifiers because of the 'sag' or dip in B+ voltage that happens on the attack, especially with a big barre chord.
It makes perfect sense that steel players would prefer the solid-state rectifier that has much less 'sag' because it keeps that nice crisp attack that we all like. Again depending on style of steel being played.
(I normally am glued to the screen to wait and see what Cowell, Grafe, Sarno, et al will post on these subjects...but I'm getting braver )
Mike
It makes perfect sense that steel players would prefer the solid-state rectifier that has much less 'sag' because it keeps that nice crisp attack that we all like. Again depending on style of steel being played.
(I normally am glued to the screen to wait and see what Cowell, Grafe, Sarno, et al will post on these subjects...but I'm getting braver )
Mike
MSA Classic 5+4
Too many 6-strings and amps to list
Too many 6-strings and amps to list
- Stephen Cowell
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Ah, but if your amp is true Class 'A' then it doesn't matter... the current never changes, so the rectifier doesn't affect the attack... any compression you're hearing from a Champ is saturation-based. One thing I've noticed... lower-voltage amps sound sweeter... the 80w Twin is just sweeter than the 100w one, for spanish electric. Opposite normally applies for steel... they like the silver-face. Note the popularity of Marshall amps... saturation/compression without tube recs.Michael Hummel wrote:It is well known that 6-string guitarists (depending on genre, of course) like tube rectifiers because of the 'sag' or dip in B+ voltage that happens on the attack, especially with a big barre chord.
Even harmonics get in the way of polyphonic sound... they step on each other's toes. Steel players prefer cleaner amplification... hence the great preference for solid-state equipment, when 'normal' guitarists (jazz being an exception) prefer tubes' harmonic distortion, with and without tube rectifiers. Some tube rectifiers work almost like solid-state, like the GZ34... or the Fender amps that had *two* 5U4's in them.It makes perfect sense that steel players would prefer the solid-state rectifier that has much less 'sag' because it keeps that nice crisp attack that we all like. Again depending on style of steel being played.
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I think a lot of people mistake cathode bias sag for tube rectifier sag. The gz34 is like a rock - very efficient rectifier! I notice only a slight harmonic difference between that and silicon
These solid state devices are more expensive than new old stock tubes, and are untested over time - the ultimate test of electronic reliability
I'd skip em but then again I'm kind of a purist
These solid state devices are more expensive than new old stock tubes, and are untested over time - the ultimate test of electronic reliability
I'd skip em but then again I'm kind of a purist
You can just solder a solid state bridge rectifier into a tube socket, or even wire up 4 diodes into an old tube socket. The components are dirt cheap.
But it's easier to just spend 10 bucks:
<center>
http://tubedepot.com/ssr.html
</center>
But it's easier to just spend 10 bucks:
<center>
http://tubedepot.com/ssr.html
</center>
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