It might improve immensely. Worth a try.
Tube microphonics
Hello. I am using Audio Research Ref 750 mono blocks and they in front of my speakers but off to the sides. Someone told me on another site that if I move the amps beside the speakers and not in front of them , my system will improve immensely. It will reduce tube microphonics. What are your opinions of this and I just want to say that I’m very new to tube amps so this is something I never heard of before. Thank you all.
@fuzztone What is tube microphonics ? Also I really don’t have that much room beside my speakers for these amps. That’s also why I wanted to know more about this before a keep moving them. |
@jjss49 Ty. I will try it. Appreciate the feedback. |
It must be hard to try or the OP would have tried it rather than starting a thread. but maybe his real question is "what is microphonics".... I test all my tubes for microphonics and reject any tube that exhibits audible microphonics. "Microphonics" is then the tube acts like a microphone. when it is excited by sound or vibration, you hear it in the system. Easy to test for, put the tube in, turn on the systme with nothing playing, and tap it lightly with your finger nail or a pencil. If you hear it (coming out of the speaker) that is microphonics. So if your tubes can be excited by sound, the music itself can cause noise. Jerry |
this is very true, and an important point to note in any discussion about tube microphonics in a hifi use context thanks for reminding us @larryi !! |
I know this is kind of backwoods, but then again I live in Vermont. If I had your beautiful setup, here is what I would do before moving your heavy amps around. @jjss49 if you think this is a bad idea please chime in. With your preamp, amp and CD player on, I would set the preamp to CD mode. I would turn my preamp up to about 1/10th volume (any VERY low setting). I would GENTLY tap on the top of the preamp cover, then CD player cover, and then sides of the amps. If I did not hear the dreaded (thump) or a tube rush sound I would repeat this, increasing the preamp volume, in small increments until I was at about one half volume. This should take in total about 25 seconds. If you do not hear a "thump" through your speakers when taping on your units I would say you have nothing to worry about regarding microphonics. In my layman's way of explaining it, microphonics are the result of anything vibrating a tube sensitive to microphonics, whether by picking up speaker vibrations, taping the top of the unit having the microphonic tube or any other movement.
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"Someone told me on another site that if I move the amps beside the speakers and not in front of them , my system will improve immensely." Oh brother... to much audio internet info. Not saying a tube can become microphonic, but that looks like perfect example of A.N. I’d stay away from audio forums and just enjoy your excellent gear. Edit-It's a free exercise to move them, so try it. Everything in audiophoolery is YMMV.
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Those Ref 750s have 16 KT 88s sitting on top of the amps with only air around them, right? You did not say what speakers you have. If you have speakers that have large woofers pointed at your tubes, I think they could affect the sound. I suggest you move the amps around the speakers, to the sides, behind the speakers, etc. until you find where your system sounds the best, and that may be with the amps in front of the speakers.😁 Use some furniture sliders to move the amps around. We don't want to hear about you ending up in the hospital.☹ |
i haven’t bought new audio research tube amp in a few years but i have over a half dozen of them, and in every case, the company puts thick rubber tube dampers on every low level tube when the amp is shipped from the factory, and when replacement tubes are shipped there are instructions to move the old dampers over to the new tubes to be installed this shows that as designers/makers of the gear, they are definitely concerned about unwanted microphonics affecting the sound produced, and are making an effort to damp them out so i think it is worthwhile for the op to make an effort to move the amps, as hard as that might be, away from the speakers, to see if a positive sonic difference results |
@carlsbad2 Kinda both. Because I really don’t want to move those amps with the full sets of tubes already in them. Don’t want anything happening to the tubes by a bump or so. I already had one tube arc on me the first time I tried my amps when they got delivered. And it took out a resistor and fuse also. Don’t want that to happen again. @jetter That sounds like a good idea. I will definitely try it. And yes. I did carry them upstairs but like u said there were no tubes in them. @ghdprentice Right. They don’t have rubber dampers for the KT150s. |
@tattooedtrackman So just test for microphonics in all your tubes as I described. |
Maybe. I’ve only rarely heard any tubes acting microphonics in power amps, and only for very old NOS tubes in the V1 / input slots. Amps are very far downstream in the gain structure, so microphonics are rarely an issue. Tube preamps and phono stages are a different story. Anyways, I’ve had a few different tube power amps right besides my speakers. Never in front, but I’ve had them on bare floor, spikes, hockey pucks, isolation feet and even expensive $3K isolation shelves. Never heard that much difference from the isolation, sorry. I play loud too. Swapping the AMPS themselves, however, is always a hugely audible difference. |
IMO tube dampers on power tubes will have no effect unless you’re doing it for the look. Never had a power tube be microphonic in the slightest. I’ve also never had any damper solve a microphonic tube issue in a preamp -- the solution in that case is a new tube, or a different preamp with lower gain. |
@mulveling @jjss49 @jetter Thanks for clarity on tube dampers on tube power amps. @mulveling Hell no I’m not gonna spend almost 2k just for looks. Wouldn’t even spend 50$ just for looks on a tube damper without it doing nothing. |
@onhwy61 I was thinking the same from the very beginning too. Plus my speakers are B&W 800 matrix. Top and bottom bass also. They act like having 2 subwoofers on ea speaker. |
And: you were correct. ie: https://upscaleaudio.com/pages/microphonics
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Keep in mind: parked next to your speaker systems, your amp's entire chassis will be boogieing, in tune with the music. How much time, effort and dinero, have many of us spent, in an effort to eliminate undesirable vibes, from our components' (passive/active) electronics? Of course: one's listening habits (ie: SPLs) would be a major variable. Happy listening! |
A thought I have *may* reduce the cost of fighting microphonics. And ChatGPT seems to agree -- to an extent: Is there such a thing as high-temperature O-rings, and could they be put around vacuum tubes in HiFi equipment, to suppress microphonics? ChatGPT Yes, high-temperature O-rings exist. They're often made from materials like Viton or silicone that can withstand higher temperatures. However, their use in HiFi equipment to suppress microphonics might not be entirely straightforward. Microphonics in vacuum tubes refers to the phenomenon where mechanical vibrations within the equipment can modulate the signals passing through the tubes and create noise or sound distortions. These can be caused by various factors such as transformer vibrations, loudspeakers, or even sound waves in the air. Theoretically, using O-rings as a dampening material around vacuum tubes could help reduce these vibrations. However, this might not be advisable in practice for several reasons:
Therefore, while it's possible that high-temperature O-rings could help dampen microphonics, it's important to consider potential problems. There are dedicated tube dampers available on the market that are specifically designed for this purpose and may offer a more reliable solution. |
Yes, I share that experience. Old GT series 6SN7 from the 1940s are notoriously microphonic. This is exacerbated by the fact that they're often shoved in high gain positions upstream (preamp), where their large plates are loosely held by tired micas and well - that's the inevitable result. However I've still had good luck with them in V1 amp slots, since they're far enough downstream at that point. That's really where I get the most benefit from my 1940s 6SN7 collection. You can still hear a little reaction if you ping 'em but not enough to worry about. I've not had a problem with mircophonics on the later (50s and 60s) old stock GTA and GTB series 6SN7. So if you have a problem slot and still want a vintage tube, use that. Sonically I prefer the tall bottle variants of these.
A ring on an audio tube is not going to be any problem for heat. Tubes are a lot better at self cooling than high power transistors. Just don't cover the majority of its surface or run them with a blanket on. |