Troubleshooting
An interactive diagnostic guide for vacuum tube amplifiers. Select a symptom, follow the decision tree, and systematically narrow down the fault. Includes voltage references, a searchable problem database, safety procedures, and tube evaluation methods.
Diagnostic Decision Tree
Select a symptom to begin. Answer questions to systematically narrow down the fault. Use the breadcrumb trail to navigate back to any previous step.
Select a symptom above to begin diagnosis
Where to Measure
Typical voltage measurement points for a 12AX7 preamp stage with 250V B+ supply. Hover or tap each probe point for expected values.
Common Problems
Searchable reference of frequent tube amplifier issues with causes, solutions, and difficulty ratings.
| Symptom | Level |
|---|---|
Microphonics (ringing on tap) Loose internal tube elements, worn tube mounts, mechanical vibration coupling Replace the microphonic tube. Use vibration-dampening tube sockets for V1. Isolate amp from speakers. | Easy |
Red plating (plate glows red) Loss of bias voltage, leaky coupling cap, wrong tube type, internal tube short Turn off immediately. Check bias supply, coupling caps to grids, tube type. Rebias after repair. | Medium |
Cathode stripping (white cathode) Applying B+ before heaters warm up, excessive current draw, manufacturing defect Add a standby switch or time-delay relay. Severely stripped tubes must be replaced. Cathode coating cannot be restored. | Medium |
Gassy tube (blue/purple glow) Air leak into envelope, outgassing from internal elements, aged getter Replace the tube. A faint blue fluorescence on the glass is normal (electron bombardment). A purple glow between elements indicates gas and is a failure. | Easy |
Grid current (positive grid) Leaky coupling cap, grid emission from overheated cathode, gas ionization Replace leaky coupling cap. Check for excessive drive levels. Replace tube if grid emission persists with new cap. | Medium |
Parasitic oscillation (RF squeal) Missing grid/plate stopper resistors, poor lead dress, excessive gain, stray coupling Add grid stopper (1k–10k at pin), add plate stopper or snubber (100Ω+100pF), dress wires away from each other. Keep input and output of each stage separated. | Hard |
Motorboating (LF oscillation) Inadequate B+ decoupling, dried filter caps, high-gain stages sharing supply Replace/upgrade filter caps. Add or increase decoupling RC networks. Ensure each stage has its own decoupling node. | Medium |
Blocking distortion (notes choke) Grid leak too high, coupling cap too large, excessive signal at grid Reduce grid leak resistor value. Reduce coupling cap value. Add grid stopper. Ensure the grid can recover quickly from overdrive. | Hard |
Crossover distortion (thin sound) Output tubes biased too cold in Class AB, mismatched tubes, bias drift Increase idle current (adjust bias). Match output tubes. Check bias supply stability and temperature compensation. | Medium |
Thermal runaway (rising current) Insufficient cathode degeneration, poor bias stability, tubes with high plate dissipation Increase cathode resistor (reduces gain slightly). Add bias temperature compensation. Switch to fixed bias with proper regulation. | Hard |
Heater-cathode leakage (hum) Insulation breakdown between heater and cathode, aged tube, excess heater voltage Replace the tube. Elevate heater supply (center-tap + DC offset). Most critical in V1 position. | Easy |
Hum (120Hz buzz) Dried filter capacitors, weak rectifier, excessive B+ ripple Replace electrolytic filter caps. Test/replace rectifier tube. Verify filter network RC values. | Easy |
Hum (60Hz smooth) Heater-cathode leakage, ground loop, poor input shielding, heater balance Check heater elevation, add hum balance pot, improve input cable shielding, fix ground loop topology. | Medium |
Carbon comp resistor drift Age, heat exposure, moisture absorption cause resistance to increase over time Measure all resistors out-of-circuit. Replace drifted carbon comps with metal film (1% tolerance, same wattage or higher). | Easy |
Output transformer saturation DC imbalance in push-pull stage, transformer core too small, excessive LF drive Balance DC current through output tubes. Check for correct output transformer specification. Reduce bass boost if present. | Hard |
Arcing or flashover Dust/contamination on tube socket, insulation breakdown, excessive voltage Clean tube sockets thoroughly. Check for carbon tracks. Inspect all high-voltage wiring insulation. Ensure spacing meets voltage requirements. | Medium |
Intermittent crackling Cold solder joints, dirty pots/switches, loose tube socket contacts, failing resistors Reflow suspect joints. Clean controls with contact cleaner. Re-tension tube socket contacts. Tap-test to localize. | Easy |
Loss of high frequencies Miller effect from increased plate resistance, screen grid resistor increased, parasitic capacitance Check/replace tubes. Verify screen grid resistor values. Reduce stray wiring capacitance. Check negative feedback loop. | Medium |
Safety Checklist
Complete this checklist before working inside any tube amplifier. Every item is critical for your safety.
Voltage decay after power-off through a bleeder resistor. V = V₀ × e^(-t/RC)
Tube Testing Guide
How to evaluate tube health using different test methods. Understand what the readings mean and when to replace.
Reading Tube Glow Colors
The warm orange glow from the heater (filament) is completely normal. This is the heat source that causes electron emission from the cathode. Visible in all operating tubes.
A faint blue glow on the inside surface of the glass envelope is harmless fluorescence caused by stray electrons striking the glass. It appears on the glass itself, not between the elements. Completely normal.
A purple or violet glow visible between the plate, grid, and cathode structures (not on the glass) indicates ionized gas inside the tube. The vacuum seal has failed. Replace immediately. Can cause thermal runaway and damage to the amplifier.
When the plate structure glows visibly red or orange, the tube is dissipating far more power than its maximum rating. This is an emergency: turn off the amplifier immediately. Red-plating destroys tubes rapidly and can damage the output transformer. Common causes: loss of bias voltage, leaky coupling cap, wrong tube type, or internal tube short.
Test Your Knowledge
Validate your understanding of tube amplifier troubleshooting before moving on.
What is the first step in systematic troubleshooting of a tube amplifier?