My tube amps have separate switches for filament and B+. (shades of my AM transmitter days) Am I better off leaving the filaments on or should I turn them off (after the B+ of course) Thanks for any experiences in this area. BTW they are powerful amps using 8 EL34s each.
I think, it depends of how frequently you do turn it off. If very rare, you can turn filament off, but if frequently, just leave them on.
Don't run valves for long periods with full heater power but no anode current, unless they are special computer versions with cathodes designed for this, otherwise they may suffer from cathode interface - a resistive layer which builds up between the cathode metal and oxide layer.
My tube amps have separate switches for filament and B+. (shades of my AM transmitter days) Am I better off leaving the filaments on or should I turn them off (after the B+ of course) Thanks for any experiences in this area. BTW they are powerful amps using 8 EL34s each.
Unnecessary use of electricity and generation of heat in my opinion.
Heat will shorten the life of electrolytic caps and I am sure the life of the tubes if you run them continuously with filaments on.
If you're worried about filaments that burn out on turn-on, I suggest implementing a soft start. By ramping the filament voltage up gently, you can reduce much of the thermal stress associated with power-up.
~Tom
~Tom
My tube amps have separate switches for filament and B+. (shades of my AM transmitter days) Am I better off leaving the filaments on or should I turn them off (after the B+ of course) Thanks for any experiences in this area. BTW they are powerful amps using 8 EL34s each.
Yeah, me too. Turn the heaters off. Either running the heaters with no DC rail, or turning off the heaters with the DC rail still powered up will ruin most VTs. Heaters without DC ruins emission, and DC with no heaters poisons cathode coatings.
Bad news either way.
Unlikely, unless anode voltage very high. Cathode poisoning can occur if the valve is run with warm heaters i.e. hot enough to emit, not hot enough to form a decent space charge to protect the cathode from ion bombardment.DC with no heaters poisons cathode coatings.
If you're worried about filaments that burn out on turn-on...
FWIW, in over 40 years of building tube equipment, this has happened to me exactly zero times.
Thanks folks, we never left the heaters on in xmitters either. I will turn them off. Kindest regards John Dozier
FWIW, in over 40 years of building tube equipment, this has happened to me exactly zero times.
I've never seen old gear with soft start on the filaments either... 🙂 The tubes are obviously built to handle some amount of thermal chock.
I implement soft start on my filament supplies mostly because I can.
~Tom
FWIW, in over 40 years of building tube equipment, this has happened to me exactly zero times.
I'm much less lucky, but in my case I can honestly say it has happened just twice (both Mullards) and within approximately the same span of time SY mentions in his post.. 😛😛😛
FWIW, in over 40 years of building tube equipment, this has happened to me exactly zero times.
Sy, I've had 3 filaments burn out on turn on in the span of a year. All were 3 out of 4 National branded 12AZ7's. They sometimes "flashed" on turn on. I replaced them with a couple of GE 12AT7's that survived the 1960-70's with me. About 2 years before that, an International Servicemaster branded 6681. Filament supply was from a 7812 v-reg. Never happened to me back in the good ol days.
- Status
- Not open for further replies.
- Home
- Amplifiers
- Tubes / Valves
- Leaving filaments on?