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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Safe to remove 2 power tubes for less watts?

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I tried searching for this topic to no avail. Yet, I'm pretty sure that this has been discussed. So, forgive me if this is old hat.

I just bought an early 70s Vibrosonic amp with a JBL D130-F 15" speaker. It hasn't arrived, yet, but I'm really excited about getting it. It's 100 watts. I've read that you can remove either the outer two 6L6 tubes or the two inner 6L6 tubes in Fender amps to cut the wattage in half (50 watts). That's appealing to me, because I won't need 100 watts for 90% of what I do with the amp. Is doing this harmful in any way to the amp? Thanks!

I tried this once on my Dual Pro 100 watts.
The only thing I noticed is that the volume knob maxed out at 5. I didn't really notice any tonal difference from 1-5 though.
So it was really just like creating half an amp, volume wise, rather than making it a 50 watt amp. Your mileage may vary.

Paul
Atomic Mosquitos
Bug music for bug people is here!
Killers from Space

I've tried it, and it really didn't have much of an effect at all for what I was trying to achieve. I just use a smaller amp instead.

Ryan
The Secret Samurai Website
The Secret Samurai on Facebook

Tsunami_Tom
I tried searching for this topic to no avail. Yet, I'm pretty sure that this has been discussed. So, forgive me if this is old hat.

I just bought an early 70s Vibrosonic amp with a JBL D130-F 15" speaker. It hasn't arrived, yet, but I'm really excited about getting it. It's 100 watts. I've read that you can remove either the outer two 6L6 tubes or the two inner 6L6 tubes in Fender amps to cut the wattage in half (50 watts). That's appealing to me, because I won't need 100 watts for 90% of what I do with the amp. Is doing this harmful in any way to the amp? Thanks!

You can do it, but like some others, I would just use a smaller amp. The output will change from 4 ohms to 8 ohms into a 4 0hm load which is okay.

Dave Wronski once told me (and maybe he can confirm this) that I could remove two of the four power tubes in my Twin Reverb to achieve a lower volume, but make sure to either remove the inside pair or the outside pair. Not the two on the left or the two on the right.

Pyronauts
Dave Wronski once told me (and maybe he can confirm this) that I could remove two of the four power tubes in my Twin Reverb to achieve a lower volume, but make sure to either remove the inside pair or the outside pair. Not the two on the left or the two on the right.

That is correct. Tsunami-Tom stated that at the start of the thread.

Yes ... pulling a pair of the output tubes cuts the current output and you get roughly half the power (in Watts). Remember, that doesn't mean half the loudness. It's just a -3dB change which is slightly noticable.

Thanks everybody for your advice. It sounds like I can at least give it a try without damaging the amp. I really don't want to buy another smaller amp, at least not so soon after buying this amp. I have a small cab and a Crate Powerblock that I use for playing at friends' houses. I was hoping that removing the two tubes would make this Vibrosonic sound like a 50 watt amp with a 15" speaker, which would be cool, but your comments have told me that's not what it will sound like. Oh well. By the way, the Vibrosonic is an 8 ohm amp and not a 4 ohm amp, like the Twin reverb. So, does removing the two tubes make it a 16 ohm amp?

Thanks again!

You're right!
I was assuming (DUMB!) that it was like the mid-90's Custom Vibrasonic which was based on the '65 Twin Rev. RI. It had a 4 ohm OT.
The Vibrosonic Rev. was an 8 ohm output, so yes, removing a pair of tubes would make it 16 ohms. It shouldn't hurt the amp. Try it.

I thought about doing this with my Twin, and after asking around, it was suggested that maybe the bias on the remaining power tubes get adjusted first. before I took the thing out for a spin. So possible food for thought there.

--Crispy

I think you are barking up the wrong tree. I would not do this. Forget the change in plate voltages and load on the output transformer, this is just not really so different a sound as to warrant risk. Stick with the design spec (a quartet) and be happy you did.

Have you thought about putting in less-efficient speakers or using some sort of power sink?

SSIV

There's also THD Yellow Jackets, tube converters.
I have no experience with them whatsoever, so I can't say if they're good or bad.

http://www.thdelectronics.com/product_page_yellowjacket.html

Paul
Atomic Mosquitos
Bug music for bug people is here!
Killers from Space

25% Off Sale on Yellow Jackets at Tubes&More
Might be a worthwhile experiment in tone modification.

Squink Out!

I did this to an old Twin Reverb. Helped a bit but not much, even 40-50 watts of blackface tone is loud.

I had this same issue. I'm running a 100 watt Gomez Surfer head and I wanted to be able to push it to get better tone out of it. I decided against pulling the tubes simply because it's only a 3db difference. I ended up getting a Weber Mass 200 attenuator and couldn't be happier. Of course, it doesn't sound as good as it would if it were completely un-attenuated and cranked up. But, it sounds much better than it did when I was playing it on low volume and not pushing the amp into its "sweet spot".

Also, if you were to go with an attenuator, everything would just stay at 8 ohms impedance so there's no need to unplug a speaker or swap them out.

Kevin
The Out of Limits
www.facebook.com/theoutoflimitsband
https://theoutoflimits.bandcamp.com/

If you pull two power tubes from a four tube amp, in my opinion it would not be wise to mismatch the speaker impedance to output transformer.

All you guys with your 6L6 tube amps that are too loud when you get them turned up to generate some harmonics should think about changing to a E34L power tube. It has 20% more headroom than a El34, and will generate harmonics sooner that a 6L6.

Is an E34L a pin to pin match with a 6L6GC? otherwise you would need to make some modifications in a typical Fender circuit.

As far as mismatching the output transformer ... well it will change the frequency response a little. That could be good or bad depending on what you expect. But the impedance of speakers varies all over the place, usually from about about -30% to about +500% over the entire frequency range. It is usually not damaging to the output transformer if the transformer was designed with a little headroom in the first place.

If you are really concerned you could use an Autoformer to match the impedance. If you need one I have a big 200W new one I'll sell you.

But was others have pointed out ... Half power down not equal half volume. Most people can barely hear the change. The way human hearing works you have to cut it by a factor of 10 to perceive the change as "half volume".

I know that half the volume= 1/10 the power.

Generation of harmonix happens at different rates with different power tubes. El84 generates much more and much sooner than a 6l6.

I forgot to say mismatching speaker to output transformer can cause arcing in the primary, is my understanding.

Congrats on the amp purchase. My bud had a Vibrosonic and it sounded great at volume, though not exactly a clean machine.
That said I wouldn't pull any tubes for the reasons stated and others.
Sounds like you just have more amp than you need. If you can't use it for 90% of your gigs I'd suggest a lower wattage rig; something in the 30-40 watt range.

METEOR IV on reverbnation

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