|
|
|
|
|
by JKCalhoun
216 days ago
|
|
Echoes of vacuum tubes in my memories: seeing tube testers in drug stores as a child (thinking they looked like either scientific equipment or else science-fiction props—and accidentally left just feet from the penny-candy), as well as peering into the back of our small B&W TV growing up (and marveling at the "city of light" inside there: all the orange glowing filaments from the tubes…). And gone by the time I was old enough to be interested in electronics. Nonetheless, my curiosity about them remained and I did eventually seek out books to understand how they worked. I have since built perhaps a dozen hi-fi stereo and mono-block tube amplifiers—some from kits, some from scratch. I've built a handful of guitar amps as well (even sold some as kits for a bit). Point to point, tagboard, PCBs… Anyone that likes to tinker in electronics I recommend they try their hand at at least one tube project (probably an amp of some kind). |
|
Only if they are aware of the voltages and current often associated with tube setups. One bad move can be painful, or fatal in some cases.
I used to work on guitar amplifiers, doing modifications on tube amps. Messing around with the internals demanded my focus, a level of attention most "tinkerers" aren't likely ready for. Not trying to gatekeep here, just suggesting it may not be something for "anyone that likes to tinker".