How to restart tube amp and pre in boxes for 2yrs


I want to start listening to music again i have Sonic Line 3 SFS 80 and i was told to be careful before i plug in listen anybody have any idea wether it is true i have to recharge the amp and pre before using Ill wait for some answers before doing anything tks for any advises
frencowboy
Post removed 
Two years is not a long time to be sitting idle. The electrolytic caps should be okay (assuming they were okay going into storage).

You should not have a problem with speakers not attached if you don't put a signal into the amp.

Elizabeth's approach would be a not to difficult to implement safety measure. Be sure to have a reasonably long time between turning on the amp again. Some tubes hate being turned on again immediately after being turned off. If I do that with my power amps, I sometimes get a tiny flash from the rectifier.
Important that you bring the amps to room temperature of 72 degrees for at least a day. Never start them otherwise. Second the load comment.
Larryi..You're actually at an advantage having a tube rectifier. The tubes running off that rectifier (high voltage) have a nice soft start. No tube will conduct until the rectifier starts conducting and turns on, minimizing the inrush current. Tube units with solid state rectification are a different story. Voltage appears at the tubes before they have a chance to conduct. The inrush current is not minimized and there is no soft start. That makes it much harder for old capacitors to form up, and puts a strain on the power transformer. The flash you see on the rectifier is because there is no soft start for the rectifier. It provides a soft start for everything in the circuit it feeds.
Hifigeel1,

Yes, the rectifier does act as soft start for other tubes and for the power supply caps.

Perhaps you can help with the issue of using a variac for tube gear that use solid state rectification. A friend had such an amp that had problems with diodes in the bridge rectifier blowing up. The manufacturer stated that both over-voltage and under-voltage could be responsible for that happening. Since the use of a variac would create such under-voltage situation, I am wondering if that claim is really correct.