Monday, February 6, 2017

Tube matching to the Max: The Maxi Matcher cometh.

I've been hankering after a Maxi Matcher for a while. It's a stand alone tube tester and matching device for certain power tubes and it's fast becoming the standard for the industry, so I thought I'd get one. Keeping up with the competition and all that.

I figured it was also a good bet for matching anything but KT88s and 6550s, as those I will still use Iron Gertrude for. That's my home brew tube matching device, it's completely analog and what's important is it'll put out 650v when called upon without even breathing hard, which is mandatory for high voltage Ampeg productions.

In any event the $695 was coughed up and the tester arrived here today.

Right away I knew something was wrong, and it is either me or the tester.

Doing the setups per the instruction sheet in the lid of the nifty hard plastic case I pulled a set of new Shuguang EL34s off the shelf, set the plate voltage to 400v, set the bias to -36v and proceeded to read the outputs.

The plate current should have been between 21 and 50 ma, and the transconductance should have been  greater than 4.0. What I got was around 6 ma per tube for plate current and the transconductance was between 1.76 and 2.31.

This was not good so I pulled another set of EL34s out of their boxes, this time a new set of JJs. The results were quite similar.

That got me worried. I measured the filament voltage and it was about 3.4vac, not the 6.3v one might expect. The 350v and 400v plate settings yielded  177v and 212v respectively.

I'm not convinced that the transformer output voltage is correct and I suspect that it has a 240v power transformer installed.

I'll keep you posted but until I hear back from the makers it's an expensive piece of eye candy, and I'll be using Iron Gertrude for my matching chores, as fussy as she is.

Stay tuned.




UPDATE:  I got a call from the folks at Maxi Matcher and what they told me was that they use a dual winding power transformer that is suitable for 120 or 240v depending on how it is wired. I got an email detailing how to switch the necessary jumpers.

In the lower left hand corner of the circuit board are  three places for jumpers. Bridge the inner one and you have 230v. Remove that and bridge the outer pair and you have a 120v transformer.

Smooth, Very smooth.

Rather than dismounting the circuit board I sweated out the existing jumper and installed two other jumpers-they look like staples-made from the wire shaft of a resistor.

It was easy enough to do and now it works just as it should, and the socket voltages bear witness to its proper function.

It still can't deliver the plate voltage that Iron Gertrude does, but it is quite a bit more stable and the digital readout is good for us old folks who tend to squint a lot.

I tend to think I'm going to be using this a lot.

UPDATE 2: I recently had a Blackstar HT60 in for a high volume crackling that it exhibited. The first task was to put the TAD EL34s -a/k/a gussied up Shuguang-on the Maxi Matcher and after about a minute of cooking the overcurrent LED illuminated and things shut themselves off as they are supposed to. This was a fault I could not have detected on my Hickok tube tester. A reboot confirmed this. A new set of EL34s from JJ and everything was peachy keen, no more unwanted crackling and distorting.
So score one tough fix for the Maxi Matcher that was worth it alone for what I paid for it.Colleagues have reported similar occurrences so I'm on solid ground here.

This is the second set of TAD EL34s in Blackstar amps that have failed or otherwise exhibited bad behavior recently. As of this moment they are all suspect and I'm not buying any.



1 comment:

  1. I've had the Maxi Matcher 2 for five months now and it has been worth every penny I spent on it. It makes testing and matching power tubes a breeze. I have no need for adapters for the 7591 or 7868, and I'm thinking about investing in some adapters for the 6BQ5/EL84 series of power tubes.

    ReplyDelete