Passive Components
A practical reference for selecting resistors, capacitors, sockets, wire, and transformers in vacuum tube amplifier construction. Interactive calculators help you determine values for your specific design.
Resistor Types for Tube Amps
Understanding which resistor type to choose for each circuit position.
| Type | Tolerance | Noise | V Rating | Temp Coeff | Typical Use | Sonic Character | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon Composition | ±5–20% | High | 250–500 V | ±1500 ppm/°C | Vintage builds, grid stoppers | Warm, vintage character | $$ |
| Carbon Film | ±2–5% | Medium | 200–500 V | ±200–500 ppm/°C | General purpose, budget builds | Slightly warm | $ |
| Metal Film | ±0.1–1% | Very Low | 200–400 V | ±50–100 ppm/°C | Everywhere — modern standard | Neutral, transparent | $ |
| Metal Oxide | ±1–5% | Low | 500–700 V | ±200 ppm/°C | High-voltage plate loads, B+ decoupling | Neutral | $ |
| Wirewound | ±0.1–5% | Lowest | 300–1000 V | ±20–80 ppm/°C | Cathode bias, power supply bleeder | Clean, inductive at HF | $$–$$$ |
Capacitor Types for Tube Circuits
Signal-path capacitors have a significant effect on tone. Choose wisely.
| Type | V Rating | ESR | Temp Stability | Freq Response | Typical Use | Sonic Character | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paper-in-Oil (PIO) | 400–1000 V | Medium | Fair | Good to 100 kHz | Coupling caps, vintage tone | Rich, warm, smooth top end | $$$ |
| Polypropylene (PP) | 250–630 V | Very Low | Excellent | Excellent to 1 MHz+ | Coupling, tone stack, RIAA | Detailed, neutral, open | $$ |
| Polyester / Mylar | 100–630 V | Low | Good | Good to 500 kHz | Budget coupling, bypass | Slightly warm, acceptable | $ |
| Ceramic C0G/NP0 | 50–500 V | Very Low | Excellent | Excellent to 10 MHz+ | RF bypass, grid stoppers, small coupling | Transparent | $ |
| Ceramic X7R / Y5V | 50–250 V | Low | Poor (X7R) / Very Poor (Y5V) | Moderate | Decoupling only — never in signal path | Avoid in audio | $ |
| Electrolytic (Al) | 10–500 V | High | Poor | Low freq only, to ~50 kHz | Power supply filtering, cathode bypass | N/A (bypass/filter) | $ |
| Silver Mica | 100–500 V | Very Low | Excellent | Excellent to 100 MHz+ | Precision RIAA, oscillator, RF | Transparent, precise | $$–$$$ |
Tube Socket Types
Choosing the right socket affects reliability, microphonics, and serviceability.
| Type | Pins | Common Tubes | Mounting | Contact Quality | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Octal | 8 | 6L6, 6V6, EL34, 6SN7, 5U4, 5AR4 | Chassis mount (top or bottom) | Good — wide pin spacing | Most common power tube socket. Key pin for orientation. |
| Noval (B9A) | 9 | 12AX7, 12AT7, EL84, 6DJ8, ECC83 | Chassis mount, PCB | Good — shield can available | Most common small-signal socket. Use with shield for sensitive stages. |
| Rimlock (B8A) | 8 | EF86, ECL82, EBF89 | Chassis mount | Good — spring lock retainer | European standard. Lockring prevents microphonics from loose tubes. |
| Compactron | 12 | 6BM8, 6GW8, 6LU8, 6JH8 | Chassis mount | Fair — dense pin layout | Late-era multi-function tubes. Less common in audio. |
| UX4 (4-pin) | 4 | 2A3, 300B, 45, 80 | Chassis mount, bayonet | Good — large pins | Classic DHT power triodes. Bayonet lock. Use ceramic for power tubes. |
| UX5 (5-pin) | 5 | 27, 56, 76, 37 | Chassis mount | Good | Pre-octal era tubes. Less common now except in vintage restoration. |
Wire Types for Tube Amp Construction
Proper wire selection reduces noise, hum, and improves reliability.
| Type | Gauge | Application | Shielded | V Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solid Core — Tinned Copper | 20–22 AWG | Signal wiring, point-to-point | — | 300–600 V | Traditional choice. Easy to route and solder. Use cloth or Teflon insulation. |
| Solid Core — Silver Plated | 20–22 AWG | High-end signal paths | — | 300–600 V | Marginally better conductivity. Teflon insulated. Premium builds. |
| Stranded — Tinned Copper | 18–22 AWG | Power supply, heaters, grounds | — | 300–600 V | More flexible than solid core. Better for runs that need to flex. |
| Shielded Cable | 22–24 AWG center | Input wiring, phono, sensitive signal paths | ✓ Yes | 300 V | Braided shield grounded at one end only to prevent ground loops. |
| High Voltage Wire | 18–20 AWG | B+ supply, plate circuits | — | 1000–3000 V | Silicone or Teflon insulation rated for high voltage. Color-code for safety. |
| Heater Wire — Twisted Pair | 18–20 AWG | 6.3V / 12.6V heater supply | — | 300 V | Twist 1–2 turns per inch to cancel hum radiation. Keep away from signal wires. |
- Use a star ground topology — single ground point per stage
- Heavy gauge bus wire (14–16 AWG) for ground bus
- Keep signal grounds separate from power supply grounds
- Chassis ground connects to star point via single bolt
Transformer Quick Reference
The most critical (and expensive) components in any tube amplifier.
Resistor Color Code Tool
Click color swatches to build a resistor value, or enter a value to find the color bands.
Test Your Knowledge
Review the key concepts of passive components for tube amplifiers.
Which resistor type is generally recommended for plate load positions in tube amplifiers?