That's the range for the two tubes combined. For one tube that'd be incredibly hot.Zhangliqun said:Don't know jack about EL34's but I have a couple of Fender Hotrods that take 6L6's and their overall functional range is about 60 to 75 millivolts, 67-68 being the sweet spot for my tastes.
It's not that they can handle more current; it's that they draw more current. EL34's would actually burn up a 6L6GC amp (the tubes themselves wouldn't) because they draw so much more heater current. Unless the 6L6GC amp has a very strong transformer, the added Ih would fry the OT. In most cases, the difference in Ih's between the tubes would mean an immediate burn, so the bias supply would need to be modded to get more where it's needed.Quencho092 said:yeah, since EL34's can handle more current they would run cold in a 6L6 amp. 6L6's would burn up in an el34 type amp if you dont throw the bias way down.
I have my amp set at the bottom side of the recommendation for biasing. I set it one ideal, but the tone was breaking up earlier than I wanted... So, I turned it down a bit while monitoring with the multi-meter until I got an ideal tone... This actually helped with the pedals I ran in front.. The tubes were running so "hot" they were distorting the distortion from my pedals.. giving them a "muddy" sound.... Of course, I had to learn this the hard way... The whole reason I was re-biasing, is because I had to install a new pair of tubes where one burned out! Keep in mind, the bias rating never exceeded the suggested range, they just burned quicker because it was in that 75% range!aleclee said:What a lot of folks either don't know or ignore is that a lot of amps sound great at 60 or even 50% of max dissipation.