Best Way To Maximize Preamp Tube Life?


I would love to learn how to best maximize tube life. Tubes have a limited lifespan, of course. So when you're not listening for a time, is it best to shut everything off to preserve the "hours" left on the tube's life? OR does the act of powering off/on itself shorten tube length as well? If so, by how much? Something like "powering off/on costs 3 hrs of tube life, so taking a music break of less than 3 hours, better to just leave it powered on." Or 1 hr, or 10 minutes, 6 hours, etc? Where is the tradeoff point?

In my system FYI, I am running a Don Sachs preamp with 4 6SN7s and 1 6BY5 rectifier.  Don says the preamp is only running the tubes at 40% of their rating. I would greatly appreciate some input from people with tube knowledge. Thanks in advance!
sid-hoff-frenchman

Showing 1 response by spatialking

I have worked with tube equipment for years, so I will toss in an opinion here.    In general, you want them off, since they don't age in the off condition.   When they are on, you are burning the cathode coating, which is the fundamental part of the design.   In addition, a max'd out plate supply will also wear the cathode coating likewise for max'ing the current flow through it.    Running tubes at reduced power plate supply and current increases the tube life exponentially.   Those are design issues, so once the designer has made all the tradeoffs, the tube life is set for the amount of run time it is on.   The best you can do is turn it off when not using it.

Now, that being said, a lot of turn on and turn offs don't help things either.   So if you are listening, then leaving for a hour or less, and plan on listening when you return, I'd say leave it on rather than do a power down and a power up.   If you are gone for 2 to 4 hours, then a power down and power up starts to make sense.   Certainly, if you are gone for 4 to 6 hours or more, you will probably want it off.     

Remember, tubes burn power, which runs your grid meter, which makes your power company profitable.  Spinning that grid meter when no one is listening uses money that really could be saved to buy new tubes. 

So in general, avoid a lot of power ups and downs in a short time, but don't burn power when no one is listening.  There is no magic rule here but that is a good general one.