Think of a tube as an electrical appliance.
If you use the appliance harder it will wear out faster.
Voltage itself will not kill a tube (under our normal operating conditions), but current certainly will (if dissipation is ignored).
Was thinking about power tube life span in relation to biasing method. I've picked up some assumptions (hearsay or heresy?) along the way. Search function didn't necessarily provide answers so wanted to ask.
1) I've read that operating tubes at a lower plate voltage increases tube longevity. I have no reason to believe this untrue, but wanted to seek affirmation on that. Makes sense. You can kill a tube just as fast with low voltage + high current as you can with high voltage and inappropriate current, becuase power is an equation.
Amps = Current and Wattage (Power)= Volts X Amps
2) I've also read biasing tubes "hotter" shortens their life ("burn them up faster"). This would imply that a lower idle current would increase their longevity, yes? Yes
3) So would a pair of EL84's at 300V in a cathode biased amp then last longer if they were biased at 80% instead of 90-100% of their max plate dissipation? Yes
Does biasing method have any effect? Would a fixed bias vs cathode bias affect tube life span? Is one harder on the tube? Say cathode biased at 100% vs fixed at 70%? Assuming our voltages were similar. Cathode biased at 100% will burn up faster
Just curious...
In the realm of TONE none of this matters because a tube is a consumable item. We have the freedom to run them how we want them and deal with the consequences. Ignoring data sheets can come with consequences, and there are lots of designs where it appears someone was ignoring the data sheet.
Matchless didn't care how may EL34s you had to buy.
They sure sound good while they last.
Don't get emotionally attached to electrical appliances.