"Makers, takers and fakers. There are no other kinds!"
A tube is a linear amplifier, when biased correctly. It has a bandwidth of at least a few MEGAcycles, if not hundreds of megacycles. This means it amplifies ALL the frequencies the same from its lowest to its highest limit! There is no measurable difference over the audio range.
Different types and brands have differences in gain, which will result in some differences in tone. These differences in tone are pretty subtle. Frankly, there's a lot of absolute hype and crapola out there that is used to sell one brand of tube over another. There are crappy brands, of course. Some brands of 12AX7s make unwanted noises like microphonics and some have a little bit more gain. Some have more hum. NONE will have peaks and dips over the audio frequency range!
When hifi amplifiers were being pioneered no one chose one type of tube over another for a specific tone. They chose a tube for how much gain or power it would deliver versus how much it cost. A pair of 6550s can deliver as much power as a quad of 6L6's. They also mean half the tube socket cost and savings in real estate on the chassis. EL34s need half the drive of 6L6s. This might save you a stage of preamp, or maybe you could use a cheaper 12AU7 than a higher gain 12AX7. You also had to factor that prices could vary on 6550s or EL34s, depending on availability. If they got too expensive a quad of 6L6s might work out cheaper.
In a guitar amp circuit you can get tone variances because you are driving the tubes into distortion, which brings out new differences to your ear. These differences are almost impossible to predict because they mainly depend on the circuit parameters far more than the specific tube. Trying to plot a curve for tone response during distortion would be pointless, because the curve would never be the same twice.
If someone tries to tell you otherwise, first check to see if he's reaching for your wallet.
Then blindfold him for a test. Better yet, make him pony up some serious coin as a side bet! Should be good for some free beer!None
Actually, to my knowledge it was never done! Mainly because there isn't any difference!ENDITOL said:
A tube is a linear amplifier, when biased correctly. It has a bandwidth of at least a few MEGAcycles, if not hundreds of megacycles. This means it amplifies ALL the frequencies the same from its lowest to its highest limit! There is no measurable difference over the audio range.
Different types and brands have differences in gain, which will result in some differences in tone. These differences in tone are pretty subtle. Frankly, there's a lot of absolute hype and crapola out there that is used to sell one brand of tube over another. There are crappy brands, of course. Some brands of 12AX7s make unwanted noises like microphonics and some have a little bit more gain. Some have more hum. NONE will have peaks and dips over the audio frequency range!
When hifi amplifiers were being pioneered no one chose one type of tube over another for a specific tone. They chose a tube for how much gain or power it would deliver versus how much it cost. A pair of 6550s can deliver as much power as a quad of 6L6's. They also mean half the tube socket cost and savings in real estate on the chassis. EL34s need half the drive of 6L6s. This might save you a stage of preamp, or maybe you could use a cheaper 12AU7 than a higher gain 12AX7. You also had to factor that prices could vary on 6550s or EL34s, depending on availability. If they got too expensive a quad of 6L6s might work out cheaper.
In a guitar amp circuit you can get tone variances because you are driving the tubes into distortion, which brings out new differences to your ear. These differences are almost impossible to predict because they mainly depend on the circuit parameters far more than the specific tube. Trying to plot a curve for tone response during distortion would be pointless, because the curve would never be the same twice.
If someone tries to tell you otherwise, first check to see if he's reaching for your wallet.