Hifihvn,
In transistors it's the same story only make plate equivalent to collector(assuming connection with common emitter). There's a purpose to adjust the offset so the output is measured the same across collector and ground on both opposite junction transistors pnp,npn pair (I assume that it's a class B amplifier, but I might be wrong) and another channel accordingly. So the offset might be different in transistors (they're way harder to match than tubes and have larger parameter tolerance) but bias current will be the same and 'sound' the same.
Can you tell what kind of amplifier we're talking about?
Brand? Class of operation? Must be a very vintage one. Most of the current ones would have an auto-bias which is a piece of cake to implement.
In transistors it's the same story only make plate equivalent to collector(assuming connection with common emitter). There's a purpose to adjust the offset so the output is measured the same across collector and ground on both opposite junction transistors pnp,npn pair (I assume that it's a class B amplifier, but I might be wrong) and another channel accordingly. So the offset might be different in transistors (they're way harder to match than tubes and have larger parameter tolerance) but bias current will be the same and 'sound' the same.
Can you tell what kind of amplifier we're talking about?
Brand? Class of operation? Must be a very vintage one. Most of the current ones would have an auto-bias which is a piece of cake to implement.