The only time you would be able to tell the difference between a tube or solid-state rectifier is when you're running the amp full out. The tube rectifier will run out of current capability earlier, and because of a 35 volt or more drop across it, will cause the power output stage to distort earlier due to a reduction in B+. Pushing it further will result in sag. Some people like saggy power supplies, others don't.
While there may indeed be tube only bigots, the same result can easily be simulated by using a 100 ohm 5-10 watt power resistor after the solid state diodes and before the first filter cap. To further enhance the effect, using a zener diode of 36-40 some odd volts will reduce the B+ voltage. Add a switch to bypass or short circuit across the resistor and/or zener network and you have the best of both worlds.
Have you seen what GZ34 tubes are going for these days?
Oh and one more point. Amps with existing rectifier tubes have a separate heater supply winding of 5 volts off of the power transformer. If you don't have this secondary winding on the power transformer, adding a tube rectifier to a solid-state rectifier equiped amp is going to be somewhat difficult than you would expect.
+1
Amps with existing rectifier tubes have a separate heater supply winding of 5 volts off of the power transformer. If you don't have this secondary winding on the power transformer, adding a tube rectifier to a solid-state rectifier equiped amp is going to be somewhat difficult than you would expect.
Yeah, add a new power transformer to the cost of a GZ34 and your better off just buying a tube rectified amp!
And....While SS rectifiers are more efficient than tube rectifiers, they also facilitate a gradual turn on of current through the circuit, as a tube only gradually gains the ability to conduct current as the heater gets the tube to a specific temperature. A SS rectifier blasts the cold/idle circuit (and the other tubes if not in standby) with full power at turnon. Some EE's attribute the longevity of old (before the common use of SS rectifiers) tube amps to this feature of tube rectification.
Even so...
I'm pretty tube oriented when it comes to amps, but particularly as I'm a bass player, I think the technical superiority and therefore the increased current efficiency of SS rectifiers far outweighs any percieved "mojo" of tube rectified "sag".
I know guitarists who would fight me to the death about that, but to each their own!
the same result can easily be simulated by using a 100 ohm 5-10 watt power resistor after the solid state diodes and before the first filter cap. To further enhance the effect, using a zener diode of 36-40 some odd volts will reduce the B+ voltage. Add a switch to bypass or short circuit across the resistor and/or zener network and you have the best of both worlds.
Not the versatility of JoeArthurs mod, but in my tube rectified Sunn's I use these;
http://www.webervst.com/ccap.htmlrather than modify the original power supply, they are only about $20 and it's plug 'n' play!