For me.......always and absolutely. Tube amps reign in tone.
It is more 'feel' to me, as the tone has been replicated to the point where I can't tell the difference in a blind test. Cheap tube amps sound and feel cheap, though. Just because a tube is used, doesn't make it automatically better than all other technologies.
That's usually because they're often run in starved plate mode and are barely anything other than a light bulb.Amps with just a 12AX7 in the preamp are pretty maintenance-free compared to a full tube amp. That tube usually lasts for years without needing a thought. They tend not to fail suddenly or take out other parts of the amp.
While I completely agree with the first part of your statement I disagree with the second. Personally I don't think all cheap tube amps sound cheap, in fact some of my favorite tube amps didn't cost much at all!!! Of course it depends on your definition of cheap too???
Out of all the fantastic valve amplifiers that I have my cheap ones get the most use!!! I've got a 5W Blackheart Lil Giant that I absolutely love to death & it cost me $60 which is pretty cheap by any standard!!! However the cabinet it's running into cost me sufficiently more than that, LOL!!!
I've also got a Ibanez TSA-15 head & cabinet that I bought on new from Sweetwater 4-5 years ago for $300 shipped that sounds flipping great!!! I play through that thing every single day & I have done ever since I bought it! Aside from upgrading the speaker to a Vintage 30 its exactly how it was when it arrived on my doorstep, stock tubes, Etc. because I just never felt the need to change anything about it?
To be fair the TSA-15 is kinda more of a pedal platform tube amp than a tube distortion amp, & on any given day I'm running about $1,500 worth of effects on the floor!!! Still, it's capable of throwing out some pretty great Blackface clean tones for about the same amount of money as buying new tubes for my 65 Deluxe.....
That's usually because they're often run in starved plate mode and are barely anything other than a light bulb.
That's usually because they're often run in starved plate mode and are barely anything other than a light bulb.
The best designs are where the starved-plate 12AX7 is backlit with a surface-mount LED that glows orange when the product is powered on.
I like the ones that glow blue
Depending on the tube and manufacturing method some tubes could actually have a faint blue glow to them.That's not really a healthy tube color, is it?
My point is that if the tube is just sort of gratuitously thrown in there, with bad EQ, or a rattle-y cabinet, or non-musical EQ points, or over-compressed, buzzy distortion (like many cheap tube amps), I certain;y won't like it. I think tubes are just one part of the formula, but not the whole thing. Every aspect must be considered, and that means using quality components. That costs $$.
Surely, though it's still the same with solid state gear. Tube amp is much easier to make to sound good technically. So cheap tube amp will usually be much better sounding than a cheap solid state.
Of course modeling amps are whole different thing...