View Full Version : Tube Damping
A-Audiophile
03-26-2005, 01:41 PM
FYI for all you tube people out there....I have an Anthem Pre2L pre-amp and while rolling tubes I dicovered a source of microphonics....the circuit board itself is a great contributor to microphonics....one thing I did to find any source was to turn the volume to a listening position and lightly tap the board and chassis. When I tapped the board I got a lot of microphonic feedback...so I damped it [at first with play-dough] then tapped it again and all microphonic feedback was gone. I am now zeroing in on all sources chassis etc and damping them.
Everything got better, deeper bass, better cleaner highs etc. so now I can hear what the tubes really sound like without the added ringing [air] affect going on inside my tubes.
Has anyone tried those Halo tube rings....
JoeE SP9
04-09-2005, 09:57 PM
FYI for all you tube people out there....I have an Anthem Pre2L pre-amp and while rolling tubes I dicovered a source of microphonics....the circuit board itself is a great contributor to microphonics....one thing I did to find any source was to turn the volume to a listening position and lightly tap the board and chassis. When I tapped the board I got a lot of microphonic feedback...so I damped it [at first with play-dough] then tapped it again and all microphonic feedback was gone. I am now zeroing in on all sources chassis etc and damping them.
Everything got better, deeper bass, better cleaner highs etc. so now I can hear what the tubes really sound like without the added ringing [air] affect going on inside my tubes.
Has anyone tried those Halo tube rings....
Take a pencil and tap the tubes with the volume up. You'll know right away if tube dampeners will help. Use the end with the eraser for safety.
hermanv
04-27-2005, 02:08 PM
Pretty much all tubes are microphonic, some more some less. Even high end manufacturers seem to delight in placing tube sockets in the middle of a PC board drum head.
Tube Sox work well, probably the silcone rings will work. The trouble with the pencil tap method is that you don't get to find that one frequency where the whole PCB resonates. I had problems with a resonance that sounded like a wolf note at around the mid 30 Hetrz range. Some records developed extraordinary bass levels and when the volume was turned up a little more the notes never stopped - oops.
I ended up trying many absorbant feet (cones wont help unless the shelf the unit is sitting on is dead quiet) dampning the shelf and then even appying that stick on damping material to the inside top and bottom covers on my pre-amp (with vents to let heat out).
In my case the real culprit was that pretty Oak entertainment system that I needed to overcome the wife factor.
It is safe and recommended by me to overdo any vibration fix, increased bass clarity for relatively small amounts of money will be your reward.
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