Uk Ant
New member
I've recently received into my possession some mullard valves (for free, which is nice). There's a couple of ecc83's and a bunch of ecc82's.
So I swapped out some of the tung sol and JJ's from my little mesa express and had a play.
Now the mesa is not the best amp for doing this sort of swapping as each valve is shared between the two channels, but as I don't have a simpler amp to hand the mesa will have to do.
Now if you were to purchase some NOS (new old stock) Mullards they'd cost something like £50 each (about $75), so to re-tube most amps it would cost you and arm and a leg. But the question is, if you had the means is it worth it?
First lets talk about the ecc82's. In american speak these are 12AU7's, a lower gain variety of the ECC83/12AX7. Now I tried these in a few locations. First in the pre-amp stages, then the phase splitter stage and also the reverb pre-amp.
Now in the pre-amp stages you get much less gain, so for those who only take your amp to the edge of crunch at best these may be just the things for you. Not as useful for me as I do like a good range of drive and these just didn't cut it.
Many like to use 12AU7's in the phase splitter stage as they give a cleaner, purer signal path. Problem is they also reduce the output, so in a little 30w amp there just wasn't enough left to really be heard above my drummer. Now for those of you with more heavy duty amps who'd like to drive you power tubes more without complaints from the rest of the world one of these may be just the thing.
The one in the reverb stage was more useful. The Mesa's reverb was always a little heavy handed and only a small amount o the dial gave far too much. The little ecc82 now means I can more accurately control my reverb, which is dead useful.
Now, the ECC83's are the ones of real interest, and I wish I had more of them to play with. Now I'm no expert but what I can say if the Mullards are much smoother and warmer than most of the modern valves I've used. The tone really is much sweeter without going muddy or indistinct.
So would, if I had the money, buy these in the future. The simple answer is yes, but the cost is high. The full cost of re-tubing my mesa, including power tubes, would be over £300 ($450 say) which is a lot of cash but I still think it would be worth it.
So I swapped out some of the tung sol and JJ's from my little mesa express and had a play.
Now the mesa is not the best amp for doing this sort of swapping as each valve is shared between the two channels, but as I don't have a simpler amp to hand the mesa will have to do.
Now if you were to purchase some NOS (new old stock) Mullards they'd cost something like £50 each (about $75), so to re-tube most amps it would cost you and arm and a leg. But the question is, if you had the means is it worth it?
First lets talk about the ecc82's. In american speak these are 12AU7's, a lower gain variety of the ECC83/12AX7. Now I tried these in a few locations. First in the pre-amp stages, then the phase splitter stage and also the reverb pre-amp.
Now in the pre-amp stages you get much less gain, so for those who only take your amp to the edge of crunch at best these may be just the things for you. Not as useful for me as I do like a good range of drive and these just didn't cut it.
Many like to use 12AU7's in the phase splitter stage as they give a cleaner, purer signal path. Problem is they also reduce the output, so in a little 30w amp there just wasn't enough left to really be heard above my drummer. Now for those of you with more heavy duty amps who'd like to drive you power tubes more without complaints from the rest of the world one of these may be just the thing.
The one in the reverb stage was more useful. The Mesa's reverb was always a little heavy handed and only a small amount o the dial gave far too much. The little ecc82 now means I can more accurately control my reverb, which is dead useful.
Now, the ECC83's are the ones of real interest, and I wish I had more of them to play with. Now I'm no expert but what I can say if the Mullards are much smoother and warmer than most of the modern valves I've used. The tone really is much sweeter without going muddy or indistinct.
So would, if I had the money, buy these in the future. The simple answer is yes, but the cost is high. The full cost of re-tubing my mesa, including power tubes, would be over £300 ($450 say) which is a lot of cash but I still think it would be worth it.