AJB Temple":1ixoznjm said:
D_W":1ixoznjm said:
In the world of guitar stuff, getting quality switches and pots gets harder over time as less and less actually uses such things - not to mention vacuum tubes. In the old days, demand for quality tubes was so high that there was no need to "match" them for audio use. They were made to a closer tolerance. Now, people (including me) will pay extra for matched tubes for guitar amps because of the much looser spec of foreign tubes. NOS old tubes are priced like unobtanium sometimes.
Or more specifically, I think Musk's preference for simplicity, reliability and cost efficiency dictates use of the stuff in the dragon capsule. I can imagine that just in the space shuttle itself, someone must've been responsible for checking and deoxidizing all of the switches.
Didn't know you are into guitars and tube amps DW. Fully agree that getting top quality valve tubes is much trickier now. I have a modest stock of about 200 old tubes for various amps like Fender Bassman (original), Boogies, a few esoteric things and some fairly modern American stuff like Atlantic. Electronic emulation and simulation of these does not get close. I also bought up a stock of machine heads (Grover et al) from a music shop that went bust a few years ago. I doubt I will use them, but eventually someone will need original parts to restore old Gibsons, Fenders, Gretsch, Martins and even PRS etc.
I played guitar young, still play some now and have built a couple of fender style guitars. Building furniture just isn't something I like very much, so guitars and tools is kind of a natural combination. Never got into tube amps as a kid (we played live and got paid - not a lot, but enough to make it worthwhile - i had a solid state fender back then and two guitars - that was the 1990s and it just needed to be loud), but recognize now as i'm older, less loud and more warm (just at the edge of breakup is good). A lot of the older equipment needs refurb (I don't work on amps), but the good stuff had much better pots and switches than a lot of the new stuff.
Someone who had worked on electronics a lot at the time informed me that those analog components are never coming back at the volume and quality they used to come in - the pots and switches were used in amps, but applied to much wider use - lots of demand, lots of suppliers, lots of competition. I haven't followed up on all of it but understand that some military stuff in china and the USSR may still use tubes. I have no idea what they may have in the consumer market that requires them.
Wish I'd have had the foresight to buy open lots of tubes on ebay in the mid 1990s when it first started. Just checked my tube boxes, some china, some slovak republic (they say that on the new boxes - jjs, I guess that's czech), and not sure where mullards are made now, but probably somewhere very far east of where I'm sitting.
The tube compression without being gainy or sounding fake is hard to emulate elsewhere - maybe someone has done it, but I tried DSPs and some of the popular modeling amps (not the junky ones) and they're all still off the mark. Favorite amp at this point is a small chinese made point to point marshall TMB clone - it's really easy to set, pentode and triode and seems to like everything except ceramic pickups (no loss for me). I have a mesa mark V, too, but playing much on it is above my pay grade. It's a great amp, but not particularly simple.
The best solid state amps I've heard, actually, were simple and made in the1980s (marshall mosfet and some of the amps fender was making at the time - but still something missing from tubes).
Resisting the desire to buy a tube power amp for the basement stereo.