Dale B
Well-known member
I used to do 70% back in the day, but it's mostly 55% to 60% now. It also depends on the amp and power tubes.
The Soldano SLOs I had were good at 50%.
The Soldano SLOs I had were good at 50%.
18ma in a JMP? Ugh, that was the number a 79 2203 I once had came to me with. Jumped that up to 34 or so, WAAAY better. Mesas can get away with unusually low bias, but in my exp a Marshall will sound terrible. Or, unusually high as well.Andy has been into that for quite a while. In the 90’s, when I was using him as an amp tech, he would state his preference for around 25mA and I can’t disagree. One time with a JMP 2203, I experimented with the limits of bias with how it actually sounds and with the B+ on that particular head (over 450 but I don’t remember exactly), I didn’t hear a major difference between 18mA and 38mA or so. So 25mA seemed very reasonable with enough room for low stage voltage at a gig but also in normal voltages, giving great tube life.
With how modern tubes are now I would definitely err on colder. Shit, my Stiletto set to Tube Rec, spongy and on a dirty setting gave me readings of 13mA. Set it to clean, Diode and bold it would be at nearly 30mA. I was bored one time and got the adjustable bias mod put in and literally have not taken one reading since I got it done and that was probably 7-8 years ago…lol
I’ve gotten so lazy about amps in the last 10 years, I figured he set it after the mod to a good setting and I won’t worry about it as long as it sounds normal.
Got a ‘75 Marshall 5 years ago or so and have never taken a reading once. It sounded good when I bought it and I figured why worry about it. If I smell something bad, I’ll worry about it. Sheer laziness.
I'll probably give the more tech-y crowd conniptions by saying this, and I'll admit 5 years ago I would've hated this too, but
I just stick a matched set of tubes in and I don't touch it again until a tube pops or something is obviously wrong.
I used to meticulously measure each bias, and I also tried the "bias to tone" thing where I'd play, tweak, play, tweak, etc and it's all such a chore.
I've yet to have any problems just sticking any set of tubes in a given amp, and I have a lot of amps. The difference between amp circuits is far far more than any little bias tweak would be, but if I only had one or two amps I'd probably be a lot more concerned with squeezing the very best out of it. I barely have time to play at all lately so when I do, I want to fuss less and play more. Same reason why I stopped putting together project guitars.
You mention you don't replace a tube until one pops. That's telling. I have had only two tubes "pop" in the last 30 years. So the fact that you even have tubes "pop" means you're doing something wrong.
I've only had a single power tube pop since I started playing in 2008, and it was on my TSL which I meticulously biased to 65%. So I'm on track for your twice in 30 years if I keep going like I'm going. Plus it's a TSL so it's more likely the amp's conductive PCB causing bias float that caused the problem than the tube/bias itself.
Like I said, if I put a set of tubes in and they start red plating, I know something's up and would take the time to bias. Whenever I swap tubes I keep a close watch on them for a while until I feel confident things have "settled in." But so far my success rate of 99.9% makes me feel like the time I spent in the past trying to nail the perfect bias was relatively wasted. Or maybe my amps just all happen to be biased conservatively/cold, but I have a pretty big sample size so I'd expect at least some of them to have problems.
Anyway, I would've had the same reaction you had just a few years ago, so I get where you're coming from.
Nothing embarrassing about that. I ain't an electronics tech so that shit is for someone with the know how. I just play gutiar and sing into the microphone. Entertaining is what my bias is. If someone here doesn't like that well stick your ohmeter where the sun don't shine!!!
I would guess that most vendors, when you don't specify, just send you a matched set roughly "in the middle" and that's why I haven't had an issue. I've never specifically requested hotter/cooler matching or anything like that.An amp's safe bias is a fairly large range, so I'm not surprised. But the real issue isn't with the amp, it's with the tubes and their rating. If you don't specify what ratings you want when you purchase from a vendor, there's no telling what will show up. It's just luck of the draw at that point. And it only takes 5 minutes to bias an amp, so I don't see that as a big waste of time.
Unless I'm missing something, there's nothing wrong with leaving that bit 'o current in the Ik reading besides the fact that the bias will be a hair more conservative, right?And I always measure the voltage drop across the screen resistors and subtract that current from the Ik reading. This was mentioned above but it’s a point worth repeating. Otherwise, wtf are we even doing this for?
Unless I'm missing something, there's nothing wrong with leaving that bit 'o current in the Ik reading besides the fact that the bias will be a hair more conservative, right?
Right, the screen current is way less than the plate. But if we are talking about actually measuring something and then making adjustments I like to actually measure it and adjust it using the real numbers.Unless I'm missing something, there's nothing wrong with leaving that bit 'o current in the Ik reading besides the fact that the bias will be a hair more conservative, right?