How do I know when I should change output tubes?


There's lots of info floating around on the net, some good, some bad. At Mojo, we are
not in the business of telling you to change out your tubes regardless.
You should know what the indicators are that a tube change might be in
order. Tubes can have one of the biggest effects on your amps
performance so changing them when a change is due can be very
gratifying in a cost versus effect comparison.

 Power Tubes: See Mojo's selection of Power Tubes

  1. Output is weak or severely unbalanced     

    This one is tricky because, in older amps, it can also be due to the output transformer. But, if only due to complexity, the tube change makes sense to do first.

  2. Tubes show signs of overheating, darkening of the glass

    This can also be a sign of OT damage or decay or just overbiasing.  With any output tube change the bias needs to be checked but with this one it is especially important.

  3. Arcing over

    Make sure and check the tube sockets and screen grid resistors if this happens. Usually accompanied by B+ or mains fuse failure.

  4. Bad tone    

    This one is highly subjective and if your output is not lowered it is likely that your tone issues lie elsewhere - the preamp tubes may make more sense in this case.

  5. Looking for a different sound 

    Again, pre-amp tubes are probably a better choice for this but if you have some experience and have heard a lot of tubes, the output section can be a place to tweak your amp.

  6. Cracked glass    
    No choice here. Pony up and get the best replacements you can.

Things that do not directly indicate time for an output tube change:

  1. Blue light in the tubes that pulses with your playing
    When tubes are flashed, the residual impurities in the vacuum are more or less removed. The less perfect the vacuum was the more blue pulsing you will see. By itself this indicates almost nothing.

  2. Dirty tubes      
    Wait until they are cool and clean them. Your amp will run cooler and love you for it.

  3. Humming, noise, hiss, etc
    None of these directly indicate power tube failure. If you don't know for sure and your tubes are relatively new anyway (say 1 or 2 years of moderate playing) then taking the amp to a tech may be less expensive in the long run. Hum, for instance, could come from out of balance on the output section. But that could be coming from a problem with biasing or the OT or it might have nothing to do with the output section and might be a crossed heater wire in the preamp or an unbalanced hum rejection circuit for the heaters, failing filter caps or any other number of things.