Hello.
While biasing a pair of NOS Orion EL34 tubes I noticed a not very unpleasant but clearly present smell that I never experienced from other NOS or new production tubes before. It's not a burning smell of plastic, no smoke, and I'd say it's even a bit likeable. Like an old library, antique electronics or an old vinyl recording.
With the amp turned on not more than 3 or 4 minutes at minimum volume and bias set to a safe range (50-70% dissipation), is it possible the smell comes from the OT insulation frying? I checked OT temperature once the amp some minutes after it was turned off and it was not hot at all. Maybe the smell comes from the cool art logo printed in the glass or some glue or product from the tube? I finally installed a different set of tubes and the amp sounds better than ever.
I read somewhere that tubes with bad gas emission could cook the output transformer, so I'm considering to get a uTracer3+ kit (not sure if it does this measurement and asked the creator) and I don't plan to use these tubes again until properly tested. I'm aware that checking emission is not good for tubes, and I'm not sure how safe is this tool in this regard. Currently I check for shorted pins with a Brymen meter in continuity mode, making sure just the heater pins have continuity.
Apart from this, and with the tubes out of the circuit, I noticed that _very_ gently tapping the glass with the fingertips near my ear I can hear a very light rattling sound in both tubes. There are probably no loose bits inside them since I can't hear anything moving when gently move the tubes upside-down. Not sure if this is neccesarily a problem since I checked this also happens with tubes I pulled from amps that work fine, and I read this does not indicate nothing since the metal expands with heat and sometimes they rattle when powered on and not when powered off and viceversa.
Your insight is much appreciated.