Turn off or leave on?


I am curious to know what others are doing with respect to powering on/off their hifi systems. My system like most is a mix of tube and SS components: tube gear (mono amps, preamp, and phono). SS gear consists of (SACD/CD player, DAC, server, and external clock) and I have a conventional DC powered motor for my LP player.  On days when I know I will listen to music, I turn it all on and leave it on until I go to bed at which time I turn it all off. I have read that it is better to leave SS components on (limit the number of temperature swings associated with powering up) and only power down tube gear (extend tube life).  Many of the components have power saving features so they shutdown after an inactive period but that is more of a sleep mode as I understand it and not the same as a true power down.  Not to complicate the question further, all the amps are hybrid so they have in effect both tubes and transistors  My SS gear is a dCS Vivaldi One plus external Vivaldi clock, server is Taiko Extreme, and my amps are all from Tenor Audio. LP player is AMG 12 that uses a typical external DC motor always left on and powered up.

besonic

On once a day and off once a day is the best way to go over the long run. :-)

 

 

Matt M

 There was a recent thread on this subject, with no consensus.  Fwiw, I had always heard the opposite of what you state, that tubed gear is best left on all the time for SQ, and that it isn’t so important with transistors.  I have a tubed pre amp and I always turn it off to save life on the tubes but I try to turn it on at least half an hour before a listening session

I leave my equipment on, even the tube preamp and tube DAC. my tube equipment is very easy on tubes

Everything on...cept for my amp which has tubes...I put that in standby when not listening 

Definitely turn off tube equipment.

 

Some of my tube equipment specifically warnings against leaving the unit on or for an extended time or unattended. Most of my high end pieces have automatic shutoff after two hours with meters to track tube time.

 

There are some tubed preamps that I think are not using tubes in the power supply and generate little heat… these are probably ok to leave on.

While my understanding is that tubes that are just idling do not age as fast as being driven… it is still tube time.

 

Most of the thirty tubes in my system have a expected tube life of 3,000 hours… or 125 days… less than six months if left on. My high end tube stuff has a function to slowly bring up tubes to full power in order to avoid abrupt turn ons thus improving tube life.

Solid state… leave it on unless it has a standby mode like most Pass equipment.