Hi folks, Happy New Year.
I took a gamble and bought a pair of 45 globe tubes (the description had the usual stuff about them being from an estate sale and they tested OK but no great details. I bid pretty low and somehow won the auction. Red flag alert, right?)
Anyway, I already had one tube of this type that works fine, so I put in the better-testing of the newly-acquired tubes in the amp (along with my old reliable one), powered on, set the hum pots, and listened to music for about an hour. For about 10 seconds when I first started listening to music, I heard a slight variation in volume in the channel that was powered by the newly-acquired tube. I listened carefully, but it didn't happen again.
The next evening I powered up the amp, only to find the newly-acquired tube had a beautiful bright blue-purple glow filling the tube. This wasn't the blue glowing outline I've seen in good tubes; this was the oh-my-goodness-this-is-really-gorgeous-but-bad-bad-bad-are-we-arcing-yet? glow. Since it's a globe tube, the glow was incredibly obvious and bright. One loud pop occurred and I powered everything down, and threw in my ST Sylvanias (known to be good) to see if I'd done any permanent damage (all seemed fine.)
Anyway, this afternoon I put in newly-acquired-but-didn't-test-as-well tube #2 (along with old reliable.) No issues on powering up, got hum pots dialed in nice and low, and music is playing. Sounds great.
Is there anything I can do to possibly avoid this tube suddenly showing gassy behavior? Should I cook it (while watching it? Easy to do today--I'm home with a bad cold.) Or is leakage an inevitability, and just one that I need to accept if I want to try to possess/use old tubes?
Mary
DIY 2-ways (TAD TD-2002, AE TD15M), Stereomour 45
Fostex TH-500RP, S.E.X. 2.1
Eros Phono