How Important is Tube Matching?


I was wondering how important tube matching is for a preamplifier. I had read somewhere that tube matching is extremely important if the tubes were used in an amplifier but was less critical for the preamp. Is this true? I've recently acquired a tube preamp and want to upgrade the tubes but wasn't sure it was worthwhile to pay the big dollars to get matched set(s)...It's a six channel preamp! Any advice would be appreciated.
Thank you!
calgarian5355
calgarian5355
The preamp I own is the Copland six channel CVA306. There are six tubes (one for each channel). Based on your feedback, I'm assuming that it's probably important for me to get at least a couple matched pairs (for front l/r...and rear l/r). The center and sub channels are probably less critical. Does this sound right???

Thanks again,
Tony
Do you know how to bias the tubes? If so, don't worry about matching the tubes. It's primarily each channel's L/R that has to be balanced -- which it is in yr Copland (it's one tube)
The preamp tube(s) you will benefit from having matched triodes within the twin triode tube itself are the driver tubes. They are responsible for splitting the signal into two 180 degree halves and sending the resulting split signals onto the power amplification stages. This of course is push-pull configurations.
Tony,
You're wrong.

Preamp tubes don't operate peak to peak. Moreover they often have a large headroom to reach such. Therefore no matching is required.
Don't spend extra on that.