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Thread: Tube Amp Warm Up

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  1. #1
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    Also to add, is to turn tube amps on let the tubes get warm(few minutes) and then hit the stanby switch(if you have one ) if your not ready to play.Alot of cats these days turn their amps on then immediately hit the standby switch My humble opinion is this is the wrong way or technique.I would like to hear other opinions on how they get their amps warmed up.......hopefully not sidetracking this thread but adding to the discussion at hand!
    Last edited by mrmudcat; May 4th, 2009 at 06:58 AM.
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  2. #2
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    I always flip 'em on and leave 'em on for 10-15 minutes. I only used the standby switch during breaks back in the day when we played as weekend warriors. When the tubes were hot they just sounded better. The old Fender Super got hotter and better as the night went on................ I also cranked it to 8 or 9 on the volume and used the guitar volume to adjust the level to where I wanted it. It seemed to be more touch sensitive that way.
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    Quote Originally Posted by oldguy
    I always flip 'em on and leave 'em on for 10-15 minutes. I only used the standby switch during breaks back in the day when we played as weekend warriors. When the tubes were hot they just sounded better. The old Fender Super got hotter and better as the night went on................ I also cranked it to 8 or 9 on the volume and used the guitar volume to adjust the level to where I wanted it. It seemed to be more touch sensitive that way.
    Just the way I used to use my Fender/Rivera Concert. I could never get on with its distortion channel. All those gain controls and pull switches, far too confusing
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrmudcat
    ...hopefully not sidetracking this thread but adding to the discussion at hand!
    Not at all, this is the sort of stuff I'm looking for.
    Mark
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  5. #5
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    A quote from my Fender ProTube Twin-Amp User Manual...

    POWER - Switches power ON and OFF to the
    amplifier. (Reduce the “shock” to amplifier tubes at
    power-up, extending their life span, by turning the
    POWER switch ON with the STAND BY switch
    DOWN for the first minute, then UP for normal use.

    STAND BY - In the DOWN position, this switch puts
    the amp on stand by. Audio is muted and power is
    supplied only to the tube filaments. Use STAND BY
    in place of switching POWER OFF during short
    breaks (one hour max.). This eliminates the normal
    warm-up time when STAND BY is switched OFF (UP)
    when returning to play the amplifier and also extends
    the life span of your amplifier’s tubes.
    See my photos at: micknewton.smugmug.com

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mick
    A quote from my Fender ProTube Twin-Amp User Manual...


    Mick I know it is black and white in the manual you grabbed this from but again in my humble opinion it is wrong/misleading or at best another way other than what ive learned.You turn the amp on without the standby switch on. The tubes warm up nice and you go about playing after warmup.(10-15 minutes) If your not ready then engage the standby switch.My fender manuals like yours say the opposite but after many years and many opinions from techs ,and other musicians etc. etc.
    this way makes the most sense to me.Having the standby switch engaged on intial power up does not allow the tubes to fully get warm and ive seen a few times where powering up that way ,then hitting the standby off after a minute or two cause fuses and or tubes to blow!:

    Just my humble opinion ......nothing more
    "I love being alive and I will be the best man I possibly can. I will take love wherever I find it and offer it to whoever will take it... seek knowledge from those wiser and teach those who wish to learn from me."
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  7. #7
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    Ditto......... plus my old Fenders always sounded better when the tubes got hot and stayed hot, IMHO.
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  8. #8
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    I'm a new member; I'm not much for big introductions, and this thread isn't the place anyway... Hello all.

    Anyway, if you take a look at the old data sheets for tubes you'll see most of them state the proper warm up time. A 12AX7 for instance needs 12 seconds or so, bigger tubes will take longer. I think a 6L6 is something like 30 sec, but I'm not sure. Large rectifier tubes take about the same, but some are quicker than others depending on the model. The standby switch comes after the rectifier in the power supply line so, depending on what type of rectifier your amp uses that will delay the B+ by itself, even if you switch off standby immediately after you power up the amp.

    Smaller amps with lower B+ voltages don't even have or need standby switches.

    Basically, I say that 1-2 minutes is a long enough warm up time depending on the amp. Of course, you should always follow what the manual says.
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  9. #9
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    Welcome and indeed 2 minutes is enough to warm up the tubes...I give them 10 -15 minutes as stated ........Ill just keep doing what has worked for me but thought id offer my opinion.

    Just looked at my manual for the vintage/modern marshall and it states to turn on without standby on and after two minutes warmup you are good to go then you can hit standby if not playing.: Exactly opposite of my fender hrd manual:

    Also I have seen personally the HT fuse,main fuse and tubes go bad when somone has turned on their tube amp with the stanby switch on and within a minute or two flip the switch to play just to hear a pop..of course there is a delay for a few seconds while the HT or Main fuse does the slow burn


    Anyways to each his own
    "I love being alive and I will be the best man I possibly can. I will take love wherever I find it and offer it to whoever will take it... seek knowledge from those wiser and teach those who wish to learn from me."
    "Develop your talent, man, and leave the world something. Records are really gifts from people. To think that an artist would love you enough to share his music with anyone is a beautiful thing."
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    You come to a point in your life when you really don't care what people think about you, you just care what you think about yourself." - Evel Knievel

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrmudcat
    Mick I know it is black and white in the manual you grabbed this from but again in my humble opinion it is wrong/misleading or at best another way other than what ive learned.You turn the amp on without the standby switch on.
    Muddy,

    I thought that one of the benefits of the standby switch is that it allows easy start-up for the tubes thus reducing wear & tear--extending their lives. (As Rx sez above.)

    It would seem that the way to go would be to turn on the amp with the standby switch on, wait a couple of minutes and then turn the standby switch off to let the amp warm up.

    You can later put the standy switch back on if you are going to take a break from playing.
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  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrmudcat
    Also to add, is to turn tube amps on let the tubes get warm(few minutes) and then hit the stanby switch(if you have one ) if your not ready to play.Alot of cats these days turn their amps on then immediately hit the standby switch My humble opinion is this is the wrong way or technique.
    That's exactly right.It slams the power tubes before they've warmed up and shortens tube life.

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