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Practical Guide

Where to Buy Tubes in 2026

Current manufacturers, reliable dealers, how to spot counterfeits, what to test on receipt, and how much to budget. Everything you need to source tubes with confidence.

Section 1

Current Manufacturers (2026)

Who still makes vacuum tubes today, and what to expect from each

The vacuum tube industry in 2026 is a far cry from the 1950s’ golden age, but production continues across several countries. The landscape shifted dramatically after 2022 when Russian sanctions disrupted the dominant Saratov and Reflektor factories. Here are the key players.

JJ Electronic
🇸🇰 Slovakia
Workhorse

Widest current production range. Consistent quality at affordable prices. Their EL34, 12AX7, and KT88 are industry staples. Factory in Čadca produces millions per year.

EL34, EL84, 12AX7, 12AT7, 12AU7, KT88, 6V6, 6L6GC, 300B, 5U4, GZ34
New Sensor / Expat Audio
🇺🇸 USA (relocated)
Major

Parent of Electro-Harmonix, Tung-Sol reissue, Mullard reissue, Genalex Gold Lion, and Sovtek brands. Production relocated from Russia post-2022. Rebrands with varying quality tiers.

12AX7, 12AT7, EL34, 6L6, KT88, KT77, 6550, 5AR4
Shuguang
🇨🇳 China
Volume

Largest-scale producer globally. Variable quality — ranges from acceptable to poor depending on batch and type. Their standard tubes are budget options; premium lines are better.

12AX7, EL34, 6L6, KT88, 300B, 2A3, 845, 211
Psvane
🇨🇳 China
Premium

Premium Chinese manufacturer. Excellent 300B and 12AX7-T (Treasure series). Their top-tier tubes rival NOS quality. The Acme series 300B is particularly well-regarded.

300B, 2A3, 845, 211, 12AX7-T, KT88, EL34
TAD (Tube Amp Doctor)
🇩🇪 Germany
Selected

Not a manufacturer per se — TAD selects, tests, and grades tubes from various factories (mainly JJ and Shuguang). Their rigorous QC means higher consistency. Popular with guitar amp techs.

12AX7, EL34, 6L6, EL84, 6V6, KT66, KT88
Takatsuki
🇯🇵 Japan
Ultra-Premium

Boutique manufacturer. The TA-300B is considered one of the finest 300B tubes ever made — NOS or modern. Handcrafted, meticulously tested. Extremely expensive but extraordinary.

TA-300B, TA-274B
Elrog
🇩🇪 Germany
Boutique

Small-batch German production. Their 300B and 845 are prized for transparency and dynamics. Direct-heated triodes only. Known for thorium-tungsten filaments.

ER300B, ER845, ER211
Section 2

What to Look For

Physical attributes that identify genuine tubes and indicate quality

Factory & Date Codes

Every major manufacturer used proprietary coding systems. These codes are your first line of authentication for NOS tubes.

Mullard

Factory code on tube base. Format: factory letter + type code + date code. Example: "B9A" prefix. Blackburn factory = "B".

Telefunken

Diamond-shaped logo on bottom. Ulm factory codes stamped on glass. Date encoded in production lot numbers. Look for the diamond <>.

RCA

Date codes typically 2-letter or letter-number pairs on tube base. First character = year, second = month/week. Harrison, NJ or Lancaster, PA plant codes.

Glass Types
Smooth glass

Standard for most production runs

Ribbed glass

Extra rigidity, reduces microphonics

Clear glass

Most common; allows visual inspection

Grey plate / dark glass

Typical of certain Telefunken, Siemens

Plate Structures

Plate construction is a key identifier. Each variant has sonic characteristics collectors and audiophiles seek out.

Long plate

More surface area, often lower noise. Prized in 12AX7 variants. Example: Mullard long-plate ECC83.

Short plate

Less microphonic, faster transients. Common in later production. Good for guitar amps.

Blackplate

Carbonized coating for better heat dissipation. Sought after in RCA, GE, Sylvania tubes.

Greyplate

Lighter coating or bare metal. Different sonic character — often brighter, more detailed.

Getter Types

The getter absorbs residual gas inside the tube. Its shape and position are era and factory indicators.

Top getter

Most common. Round disc at top of envelope.

Side getter

Mounted on side. Some Telefunken, Siemens.

D-getter

D-shaped. Early 1950s. Highly collectible.

Halo getter

Ring-shaped. Most post-1960 production.

Base Types
Brown base Mullard

Distinctive brown phenolic base on early Mullard production. Highly prized. Often paired with long plates.

Gold pins

Gold-plated pins resist oxidation. Found on premium and military-grade tubes. Better contact reliability over decades.

Section 3

Where to Buy — Trusted Sources

Vetted dealers, online specialists, and alternative channels

Online Specialists
The Tube Store
🇨🇦 Canada / North America
thetubestore.com
SpecialtyWide range, matched sets, premium selection
PriceMid to high
Returns30 days, tested
Tube Depot
🇺🇸 USA
tubedepot.com
SpecialtyGuitar amp focus, bulk deals, accessories
PriceCompetitive
Returns90 days
Watford Valves
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
watfordvalves.com
SpecialtyNOS specialist, rare types, European stock
PriceMid to premium
Returns14 days
Tube Town
🇩🇪 Germany
tube-town.net
SpecialtyCurrent production, amp parts, DIY kits
PriceCompetitive
Returns30 days EU
Lampes & Tubes
🇫🇷 France
lampes-et-tubes.info
SpecialtyNOS European stock, French-language support
PriceMid
Returns14 days
Alternative Channels
eBay

Risky but possible. Look for established sellers with tube-specific feedback (not just generic positive reviews). Check photos carefully against known construction details. Avoid "too good to be true" prices on NOS. Use PayPal buyer protection.

Ham Radio Fests & Fairs

Excellent for finding genuine NOS at fair prices. Sellers are often knowledgeable enthusiasts. You can inspect tubes in person before buying. Hamfests, vintage electronics fairs, and audio shows are prime hunting grounds.

Direct from Manufacturer

JJ tubes: order via authorized distributors (Eurotubes, Tube Amp Doctor). Psvane: official AliExpress store is legitimate. Takatsuki and Elrog: direct order or via select audiophile dealers.

Audio Forums & Groups

DIYAudio, AudioKarma, and Head-Fi classifieds can yield great deals from fellow enthusiasts. Reputation systems help. Always request test results before buying.

Section 4

Spotting Counterfeits

The biggest risk in NOS buying — how to protect yourself

Counterfeit tubes are the biggest hazard in the NOS market. Relabeled Russian or Chinese tubes sold as Mullard, Telefunken, or Amperex are common. Here is how to protect yourself.

Red Flags
Price too low

A "NOS Telefunken ECC83" for $30 is not a Telefunken. Genuine examples start at $150+.

No factory codes

All major NOS manufacturers etched or printed factory and date codes. Absence = relabel.

Wrong glass for era

Claimed 1950s tube with modern-looking glass envelope? Construction should match the claimed decade.

"NOS" without original box

Genuine NOS often comes in period-correct boxes. No box raises questions — not definitive, but suspicious.

Silkscreen over etch marks

New label printed over scraped-off original markings. Hold tube at angle under bright light to reveal ghost text.

Mismatched construction

Plate structure, getter type, and pin material should all be consistent with the claimed manufacturer and era.

Known Counterfeit Patterns
How to Verify
Check factory codes

Cross-reference against online databases and reference books. Brent Jessee, TubeWorld, and VTV maintain code guides.

Examine under magnification

A 10x loupe reveals plate construction details, weld quality, and whether labels were applied over removed markings.

Compare plate photos

Reference sites maintain internal construction photos. Compare your tube’s internals against verified examples of the claimed type.

Section 5

Testing on Receipt

What to check when your tubes arrive — and what equipment you need

What to Test
Shorts

Check grid-to-cathode, plate-to-grid, and heater-to-cathode. Even a minor short can cause hum, oscillation, or damage your amplifier. Test before inserting into any equipment.

Emission / Gm

Transconductance (Gm) is the key health metric. Compare measured Gm against datasheet nominal value. Above 80% = strong. 65-80% = good. Below 50% = reject or relegate to non-critical positions.

Noise

Listen for hiss (white noise floor), crackle (coating issues or gas), and microphonics (tap the tube gently — if you hear it through the speaker, it’s microphonic).

Matching

For push-pull pairs: Gm values should match within 5% (ideally 3%). Also match plate current at the operating point. Mismatched pairs cause asymmetric distortion and transformer saturation.

Equipment Tiers
Minimum
Multimeter

Check for shorts between pins with a DMM on continuity/resistance mode. Check heater continuity. Basic but catches dead and shorted tubes.

~$30
Recommended
Tube Tester (Gm type)

Measures transconductance under operating conditions. Vintage units (Hickok 539C, TV-7) or modern (Amplitrex AT1000). Provides Gm reading, short detection, gas test, and matching data.

$200\u2013$2,000+
Ideal
Curve Tracer

Plots full Ia/Va curves at multiple grid voltages. The uTracer 3+ is the modern DIY standard. Reveals everything: Gm, mu, rp, linearity, emission, matching — all from one sweep.

$300\u2013$500 (uTracer kit)
Best Practices
  • Return policyAlways buy from sellers with a return policy. 14–30 days minimum.
  • Burn-inRun new/NOS tubes for 24–48 hours before critical evaluation. Parameters stabilize during initial burn-in.
  • DocumentRecord Gm readings at purchase. Retest periodically to track degradation curve.
  • Visual inspection firstCheck for cracks, white deposit (gas leak), loose elements, or bent pins before powering up.
Section 6

Budget Guide

What to spend, when to save, when to invest

Typical Price Ranges (2026)
CategoryModernNOSNotes
Preamp (12AX7, etc.)$15–$50$50–$300V1 position is where NOS makes the most difference
Power (EL34, KT88, etc.)$25–$80/pair$100–$500+/pairMatched pairs/quads essential for push-pull
Rectifier (5U4, GZ34)$15–$40$30–$200Often overlooked but affects sag and dynamics
Premium (300B)$80–$600$500–$3,000+Takatsuki/Elrog modern rival vintage WE 300B
When to Save
  • Power tubes you’ll replace every 2–3 years — modern JJ or EH are excellent value
  • Non-V1 preamp positions (V2, V3 tone recovery) — less critical, modern is fine
  • Rectifiers in solid-state-rectified amps — if you have SS rectification, save here
  • Practice and gigging amps — tubes will get knocked around
When to Invest
  • V1 preamp position — this is where tube character is most audible. NOS or Psvane here.
  • Phase inverter — affects symmetry and push-pull balance. Worth a premium tube.
  • Irreplaceable NOS types — if supply is dwindling, buy now. Prices only go up.
  • Single-ended output tubes — one tube carries the entire signal. Quality matters most here.
Stocking Strategy

Buy 2 matched sets of power tubes for any amp you plan to keep long-term. When the first set weakens, you have an immediate replacement without waiting for shipping or stock availability. For preamp tubes, keep at least one tested spare of each type. Label all tubes with purchase date and Gm readings.

Cost-Per-Hour Perspective

Even expensive NOS tubes deliver remarkable value when you calculate cost per hour of listening. A $300 NOS 12AX7 lasting 8,000 hours costs $0.04/hour. A $200 matched pair of EL34s lasting 3,000 hours costs $0.07/hour. Compare that to a concert ticket or streaming subscription.

Cost per hour = tube cost / expected lifespan in hours

Tube Budget Calculator

Select your amp type, choose NOS or modern for each position, and see your estimated total cost with cost-per-hour of listening.

Amp Type
V1 Driver (12AX7)
$15 – $40
Output (300B)
$80 – $250
Rectifier (5U4)
$15 – $35
Listening hours / week
10h
Estimated Total
$110 – $325
Cost / Hour
$0.07
Tube Life
~5.8 yr

Estimates based on average tube lifespan: ~3,000h for power tubes, ~8,000h for preamp tubes. Actual life varies with bias, usage, and tube quality.

Quiz de synthèse

Test Your Knowledge

Validate your understanding of tube sourcing — from manufacturers to counterfeits to budget strategy.

Question 1 / 6

What event dramatically shifted the tube manufacturing landscape after 2022?

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