And fewer on/off cycles, I suppose ?
I think that there may be differing opinions on that, @inna . Personally, I do not like to leave output tubes idling when I am not around/in the close by vicinity. The older I get the more neurotic I get.
But the way I listen these days in only once or twice a day . . . it’s ot like I am in and out and turning music on & off. I will say, however, that even back in those days I never left tubes on when I was out of the house.
But: the sort of exception was with my first tube amp before I knew anything at all of what I was doing. It was (and I still own it) a Cary SLA 70 signature and it has a standby switch. With the standby switch in ’on’ the tube filaments are constantly being heated. I’d have to get into the manual to tell you exactly which filaments are heated and glowing, as tubes and electricity is not second nature to me. Anyway, as I was learning the hard way basic stuff that every tube owner should know, I was talking to the service rep guy from Cary (this is back in the ’90s when they had great customer service) and he said it was not his advice to always leave the amp in stand by as I had been doing. Therefore, I then started using the standby switch in sort of a sequence . . . in other words first go to standby for a while before I went to ’ON.’
As far as preamp tubes, I don’t leave my pre on when I am not listening, either, but there have been threads on that subject, and I know that there are some that do.