Upon measuring the filament voltage, I found it to be 4.85 volts.
Regarding this measurement, I have a few specific questions:
- Accuracy: How critical is filament voltage accuracy for this specific tube?
- Line Fluctuations: Should I account for the fact that the AC network voltage in Ottawa fluctuates between 118V and 123V?
- Voltage Preference: In terms of tube longevity and performance, is a slight overvoltage or a slight undervoltage preferable?
@alexberger If the correct filament Voltage cannot be obtained I find it preferable to err on the low side rather than the high side as that will likely promote tube life.
Filament Voltage is important. As the filament cools off, the output impedance of the circuit will rise, output power will fall and distortion will go up. The opposite is true with the filament Voltage increased.
But the filament has a life span independent of the rest of the elements of the tube. Running it at a high Voltage than spec will shorten its life.
AC line Voltage variation is why you hear the system sound great one day and maybe not so good at other times.
There are DC to DC converters available these days that allow you to run a DC Voltage. They can keep the filament Voltage spot on regardless of the AC line Voltage. I recently used some in a push pull amp using 45s, which have a lower filament Voltage than can be pretty tricky to set up otherwise. The DC to DC converters were quite compact and allowed me to float the supplies for the tube- no hum problems, no noise problems so I could wire the cathode circuit as needed. They worked a treat!

