Thank you, Ralph.
I’ve seen excellent reliability out of current production Shuguang 5AR4. I think the one I use logged 7 years of steady rotation. My issue with them is that they barely reach a sonic level of adequacy. No idea on how my Sovtek holds up, as I find it unlistenable, and it has little more than break-in hours on it. JJ definitely sound the best of today's tubes that I've tried, though still not as good as vintage Mullard. But after blowing a half dozen between my various amplifiers inside a year, I’ve grown tired of buying more.
You’re right about the ST70. I consider it a fantastic amplifier, and my Jadis (one of their best) Orchestra Reference and Quicksilver (considered their finest) 8417 both employ the same design even if Leo Fender implemented it prior to Dynaco. I’ve run the gamut on Dynaco "improvements", most of which swap the circuit for a Mullard long-tail pair. None of which improve upon the original. In my experience, presuming a person doesn’t demand more power, there’s just one sonic flaw, which takes less than $20 to address
I’ve seen excellent reliability out of current production Shuguang 5AR4. I think the one I use logged 7 years of steady rotation. My issue with them is that they barely reach a sonic level of adequacy. No idea on how my Sovtek holds up, as I find it unlistenable, and it has little more than break-in hours on it. JJ definitely sound the best of today's tubes that I've tried, though still not as good as vintage Mullard. But after blowing a half dozen between my various amplifiers inside a year, I’ve grown tired of buying more.
You’re right about the ST70. I consider it a fantastic amplifier, and my Jadis (one of their best) Orchestra Reference and Quicksilver (considered their finest) 8417 both employ the same design even if Leo Fender implemented it prior to Dynaco. I’ve run the gamut on Dynaco "improvements", most of which swap the circuit for a Mullard long-tail pair. None of which improve upon the original. In my experience, presuming a person doesn’t demand more power, there’s just one sonic flaw, which takes less than $20 to address