drcampbell
Senior Member
- Location
- The Motor City, Michigan USA
- Occupation
- Registered Professional Engineer
The longevity of vacuum tubes, like that of incandescent lightbulbs, is strongly correlated with operating voltage & current. A little extra voltage can mean a large reduction in longevity.
Line voltages have been creeping up over the years.
Somehow, (D'Oh!) I never put two and two together until this week, when I stumbled upon this voltage-reducing box on eBay.
If you're a vacuum-tube aficionado and would like your antique electronics to last longer, powering them with a buck transformer that reduces line voltage down to the 110 volts they were designed for seems like a good idea. Maybe even 105 volts. (a'la the hundred-year lightbulb in the firehouse)
This is not an endorsement of Dynaco products.

Line voltages have been creeping up over the years.
Somehow, (D'Oh!) I never put two and two together until this week, when I stumbled upon this voltage-reducing box on eBay.
If you're a vacuum-tube aficionado and would like your antique electronics to last longer, powering them with a buck transformer that reduces line voltage down to the 110 volts they were designed for seems like a good idea. Maybe even 105 volts. (a'la the hundred-year lightbulb in the firehouse)
This is not an endorsement of Dynaco products.
