CAJames
Seasoned Member
  

"I've run every red light on memory lane."
Posts: 2447
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Tube matching is a bit of a hobby horse for me. I'll save my rant for the end, so you can skip it if you want, but as a practical matter I think in most cases "tube matching" is way over rated. I've had tube amps (and a tube tester) for a long time and in my experience tubes need to be pretty far out of alignment for there to be an audible impact. This is esp. true if you have e.g. a UFO25 with which you can adjust the volume for both channels separately, effectively a balance control. For power tubes in push-pull amps matching matters more, for most single ended applications it doesn't matter enough for me to pay extra for it. I would rather buy more cheaper tubes and check them by ear rather than pay extra for "matching" whatever that means.
Now my rant, that I've posted elsewhere. The thing with most tube testers is they are designed to tell if tubes are bad, not if they are "good" or "matched." This means the engineers needed to pick one operating point out of the entire phase space of possible currents and voltages to do a single measurement to determine if a tube needs to be replaced. This is a nearly impossible task, but by and large the tube testers do a really good job solving that problem. The thing is this operating point is likely no where near the operating point where the tubes are used in your amp. So tubes that "match" on your tube tester can be totally different in the amp, or vice versa. And all that assumes your tube tester is even calibrated, which is a whole 'nother thing.
There are more sophisticated tube testers that can test tubes at multiple points i.e. curves, and/or arbitrary points. Decware has one of these so Steve can test tubes at the operating point used in the amp. These do a much better job of actually matching tubes (assuming the curve is close to the operating point of the amp, which is always a question), but as Steve has pointed out even that isn't really enough. What he does is test tubes in an amp to not only match gain, but also harmonics. If you care about matching, that is IMO what it takes to have matched tubes.
I've had a tube tester for a long time, and at first I would totally geek out about matching tubes. But the more tubes I tested the less I found any correlation between test results and sound quality. I still test the tubes I buy, to confirm there are no actual problems and I'm getting what I paid for, and still note the Gm, because why not, but the only test that really matters to me is how they sound. JMO/FWIW/YMMV and all that.
End of rant, we can now return to our regular programming.
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