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worried about tube amp over usage


crazytubepower

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I was thinking about how many hours my new tube amp is going to be on buring the week, and I came up with the astounding figure of 70 hours. Is that acceptable to do with tube gear, and with running that many hours is there anything I should expect differently. (sorry for my ignorance about this subject) James

That's almost exactly what worried me about mine. However, and with me, it was about 3 hours.

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Hey crazy, back in may I bought a st-70 from one of guy landau's

friends. The thing is probably about forty years old. Since I've had it

I've put hundreds of hours on it and who knows kow many thousands of

hours were on it previously. I can honestly say that I see no reason

why this thing cant last another forty years, granted it may need to be

fixed or rebuilt in that time period. I say enjoy your amp. Or you

could put an hour meter on it like they have on forklifts and log those

hours lol.

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CTP,

This is from the upscale audio website:

"Tubes age in a couple ways. One is they

lose emissions over their lifetime. In other words, they run out of

gas. Or better yet steamas they dont just "quit" but lose their drive

capability gradually. If you figure a tube like a 12AX7 or 6922 to be

good for about 10,000 hours, and you leave it on 24 hours a

daywellyou do the math. There are 8,736 hours in a year. So when did

the tube go bad? It depends on how picky you are. Its like a tube of

toothpaste. Kinda peters out at the end but it seems you can squeeze

out a little more. Some products (and audiophiles) are more picky than

others. I recommend to folks that want to upgrade to premium new old

stock tubes that they do it while their stock tubes are good. That way

you have the cheap ones working and available should you decide to sell

the pre-amp."

In other words, they should last a long time. Many factors come into

play. Some amp designs have the bias up on the power tubes, thereby

shortening their life span. Ventilation could make a difference, but

probably a smaller one. You small signal tubes will last longer than

the output tubes will. Mac amps are pretty easy on the output tubes by

design. But enjoy it.

I never changed tubes in my Dynaco from the mid '70s to 2002.

There were times I had in on for many hours a day. I should have

changed them, but they were still working.

Bruce

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At 70 hours ON time a week I would say you can plan on power tube replacemet in 1 1/2 to 2 years if the amp is kind too them and there of good quality. If its not kind your talking about new tubes every year with that ON time (my guess is its not all that kind to them). The small signal tube should last at least 3 to 4 years. The amp itself doesn't care one way or the other in fact most components in the amp suffer more from Hot/Cold cycle more then always on.

Craig

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