Jacew
New member
Re: The right way up for Tubes in an amp chassis..
Yes. Solid states are much more prone to the problems. Tubes are very good at dissipating excess heat compared to those, needing huge extra cooling systems to work.
Tube amp combos really need to have back open enough for ventilation and can havepossible issues with vibration. I prefer heads partially because of that. (Just never found to really like open back cab in terms of tone anyway)
Well, Marshall was one of if not the first high gain amp -so maybe it makes sense that they were learned this made their amps dissipate heat better plus they wanted the weight in the bottom because they were designing stacks in a tall narrow head early on.
But I firmly believe that the oscillation from a fan that is hard coupled to the chassis will cause issues with solder joints before heat on the components will on a well designed amp -I have upside down Fenders that have the original components from 60 years ago.
I don't think 100plus watt 6550 amps have a choice thought -gotta have a fan.
Fender's original inverted arrangement comes from the desire for the controls to be on the top or angled and making more room from the speaker or enabling a smaller overall cabinet - I don't think heat was a concern in their original designs.
I've never had a heat problem though -except solid state amps ironically, but I buy quality proven amps, keep my valve amps dialed and keep the amps ventilated (not against the wall).
Yes. Solid states are much more prone to the problems. Tubes are very good at dissipating excess heat compared to those, needing huge extra cooling systems to work.
Tube amp combos really need to have back open enough for ventilation and can havepossible issues with vibration. I prefer heads partially because of that. (Just never found to really like open back cab in terms of tone anyway)