I am not convinced it hurts anything at all to do it either way. That is unless Power Tubes and Caps should last more than 50 years.
I have seen too many old fender amps that I know the players used standby switches religiously that have tubes in them that are original. I have a 62 Bassman and a 64 Super Reverb with original tubes or at least the date code on the Bassman confirms the 5881 were older. The Super Reverb only began not using a standby about 7 years ago when My father gave it to me. He was always taught to turn on AC power for at least 30 seconds before turning on the DC.
Bassman is SS rectified and I did replace the Standby switch last night. The switch you could tell was used often as it had a loose feel to it. Partial from usage and part from switching DC. So from early 1962 until last night a fender bassman never needed a single part and even then the switch was still working, so it did not really need this. Would soon tho.
Before you consider the slow warmup for the Super Reverb, it does not use a GZ34, but a 5U4GB.
Also, after rereading this thread last night, I checked a few tubes which were original to amps I bought as collectable. This one is a 66 JTM45 and actually came with GEC KT66, which I replaced when I bought it. I have owned it for 12 years now so it only saw use by a dumb player who doesn't know standby switches kill tubes. He played the amp loud through the late 70's until I bought it 2005. I checked the tubes and they are still stunning.
What am I missing? If we were to slow the inrush and let the tubes take time to warm up and caps to not get hit, would they last forever? And even if they could last forever none of us could stand it anyway. All my friends who play use standby switches do the ritual startup and shut down. Most all of them play old fenders which according to standby is probably the worst design from what I read.
I have no doubt and am not arguing points of modern knowledge as it seem conclusive additional stress is caused by standby switches. It seems to me if you really like to turn off your DC and are willing to only use your tubes for 50 years, I say standy. If you have had problems with flipping a standby switch and blowing up tubes and caps, well by golly you just did not build them like they used to.
Anyone? Have you ever had a problem with an amp you know was caused by the standby switch, other than the switch itself? I am telling you, if the amp has one the vast majority of players are tearing up their amps daily. So next time you see someone playing a Blackface 65 Deluxe and they flip to standby for a break, simply remind them that their tubes, even though they may be original to the amp, would last longer if they understood the correct modern switching.
One more thing and I will stop. Is it best to let you car idle so the oil pressure is up when you first start it for a minute before putting it in gear, or is it 30 seconds? I cannot remember. I do know oil pressure almost immediately ramps up, but how much oil should be on the rocker arms before I start to drive.
This is a cool thread.