300B tube death question........



Has anyone experienced the death of their 300b tube? What happened.....Exploded? Imploded? Awesome fireworks display? I'm just preparing myself for when it happens.

Also, the 300b tubes in my amp is underbiased and it won't reach optimum recommended voltage settings (volt meter should read 700ma but tube is at 450ma). The amps have manual bias adjustments only.

So far nothing has happened and the sound is fine. Should I replace them now or wait until they die? (see above question).

Amps: ASL monoblocks SET amps - (2) 300b per channel
Tubes: Valve Art 300B 98C

Thank you for sharing.
dogpile

Showing 2 responses by herman

Has it always been this low? If you used to be able to get 700mV and it has dropped down to 450mV then the tubes may be fading away.. It could be something else but the tubes would be the number one suspect. The easy test is to try a fresh set of tubes but that is a bit expensive.

If it has always been 450mV maximum then something else is going on. Are these the tubes that came with the amp? If not, since all 300B tubes are not the same, these might not be a good match for your amp.
"HERMAN - Three out of the four can bias to 700 no problem. The one at 450 is the same brand and was purchased new."

Ah Ha, that would have been nice to know up front. You knew one out of the four was different but didn't share that with us.

"How will I know when a 300B tube is on it's last legs?"

You now know, you have a weak tube. It has low emmission. You have 2 choices, replace the one weak tube or the whole set. If they have relatively low hours I would replace just the one, but if they have a lot of hours I would replace the whole set.