hi all
recently i was talking to a bud of mine about biasing and stuff. basically, he told me that the bias setting doesnt really matter as long as you dont have it way too hot.
as far as i know, setting the bias low puts less stress on the tubes and the transformer and stuff, so they will last longer, but also kills your tone (well, this is a matter of preference, though. some people (particulary people who like solid state amps [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] ) like ice cold biased amps ^^ .
if you set it hot, your tone will become better, but the life of the tubes is shortened, up to the point where you push them past what they can handle, resulting in tube failure (and possibly damage to resistors and the transformer? ). but other than that i think there are no rules concerning biasing.
i know there are lots of amp gurus around here, so maybe at least one of them might show up and tell me if there are any other things to keep in mind.
btw: how can i find out if the bias is set too hot without measuring the voltage (or is it the current? [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] )? i remember something like if the grey large plates in the middle of the tube start glowing red hot (only spots or in the worst case the whole plate) it is about to die, right? and a slight blue glow is normal, right? and the.....damn, i dont know how it is called, the "heating" of the tube will always glow red no matter where the bias is set, right? so the tube will always glow red with a slight blue glow in the middle, but the middle section will also glow red hot if the tube is biased too hot and is about to die, right?
maybe someone can clarify the whole issue a bit.
greets
fragle
recently i was talking to a bud of mine about biasing and stuff. basically, he told me that the bias setting doesnt really matter as long as you dont have it way too hot.
as far as i know, setting the bias low puts less stress on the tubes and the transformer and stuff, so they will last longer, but also kills your tone (well, this is a matter of preference, though. some people (particulary people who like solid state amps [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] ) like ice cold biased amps ^^ .
if you set it hot, your tone will become better, but the life of the tubes is shortened, up to the point where you push them past what they can handle, resulting in tube failure (and possibly damage to resistors and the transformer? ). but other than that i think there are no rules concerning biasing.
i know there are lots of amp gurus around here, so maybe at least one of them might show up and tell me if there are any other things to keep in mind.
btw: how can i find out if the bias is set too hot without measuring the voltage (or is it the current? [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img] )? i remember something like if the grey large plates in the middle of the tube start glowing red hot (only spots or in the worst case the whole plate) it is about to die, right? and a slight blue glow is normal, right? and the.....damn, i dont know how it is called, the "heating" of the tube will always glow red no matter where the bias is set, right? so the tube will always glow red with a slight blue glow in the middle, but the middle section will also glow red hot if the tube is biased too hot and is about to die, right?
maybe someone can clarify the whole issue a bit.
greets
fragle
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