Thanks PB. Still had sweaty hands during the second power on.
No arcs, no fire, house still standing. These are quiet and sound good. Upped the volume for a while for bigger grid swings, all is fine.
Will now leave the amp on for the next 6 hours and see.
Next question.
Would dropping the plate voltage and biasing for 30-35mA have any negative side effects on tube life from these bad testing specimens? I figured this might improve the "safety margin" a bit.
Essentially going 45, without the tube's (as i don't have any). And yes, won't forget to stay with the normal heater voltage.
Why? Was planning on this before I found these tubes.
I hope that upping the choke's capacity would help to bass a bit (with my speakers, that is). Even when the amp is going to achieve 1.5-2W maximum. The lower plate resistance of the 2A3 vs 45 makes a better damping factor with the same output transformer / load (to hopefully work with my speakers for even better bass).
Another question. To learn what's at stake here.
I was most afraid of an arc-over when I saw this blue glow. What would die first if they did? I figured the output transformers wouldn't like it and be first to go? Parafeed or interstage cap next? And with bad luck speakers / tweeters?
As the current flows through the tube, the parafeed capacitor, the output transformer, and back to the tube if i'm correct.