Driver Tubes 6922


I've heard a few people opining that the driver tube can be the most important tube.

Why is this?

What do you look for in a 6922?

What differences might I expect to hear replacing my modern GL e88cc with an expensive NOS 6922?

Any recommendations for a 6922  based on actual experience?

 

Thanks

 

TD

 

tonydennison

Showing 5 responses by tomcy6

Calm down, Tony. New Old Stock should be new. Brent will replace the tubes. Tell him that the tubes appear very much used to you.and ask him what his criteria for labeling a tube NOS are.

Preamp tubes are less likely to damage your gear than power tubes, but still don’t put tubes that are making noises or sparking into your gear. I know you don’t know until you put them in the first time, but once you pull them out don’t put them back in.

This will all turn out well. Audio just requires a little patience sometimes.

Tony, There are a lot of tubes sold on ebay as NOS that aren’t There are a lot of lightly used tubes that still test above average new.

Without going too far into the weeds, tubes are usually tested for transconductance to determine how long they will last and to match them. Tube testers, Hickok is the most common brand, come with a scroll that tells you what the average transconductance is for a new 12AT7 tested on that machine.

Nobody has kept track of which tubes have been used and which haven’t. So if a tube tests above average new and the glass and pins look clean, many sellers will sell it as NOS. Others will sell it as "tests above new" but not call it NOS. There have been discussions about how to categorize old tubes that test above new but probably have some use as ANOS, i.e. almost new old stock., but that never got anywhere.

Tube dealers like Brent Jessee or Vintage Tube Services (Andy Bouwman) use more sophisticated testers than the Hickoks I mentioned above, although Hickok did make lab grade testers which are much more precise than the more common Hickok 600s or whatever.

Even with all the uncertainty, many people still feel it is worth it to buy vintage tubes because they had the same experience you did. They like the sound better. There is a LOT to know about vintage tubes, so you’re better off dealing with someone like Brent or Andy than trying to learn it all yourself.

@tonydennison  Did Brent say  whether the tubes he sells as new are new, to the best of his knowledge, or test new and look pretty good?