All my 7N7 tubes have copper rods in the plates. Of the ones with extra support rods, they too are copper.
I haven't heard any evidence, though, that the material the support rods are made of has any bearing on sound. Or, for that matter, that the subtle difference in sound between the tubes with support rods and tubes without are due to the existence of the support rods themselves, since the tubes have other construction differences.
I acknowledge variations in sound and performance, but it's subtle. And two tubes with identical construction, measuring the same on testers etc will often vary in sound. So I think pitting one example of a particular tube against another single example of a slightly different one doesn't exactly say much.
Cheers,
Robert
I don’t think the rod itself has any bearing on sound quality either. I do think that it is an obvious way of telling different batches apart. I don’t see it as pitting them against each other so much as differentiating between them. The earliest metal based Sylvania 6sn7w are well regarded but super expensive. If you want that sound but don’t want to pay the price I am now convinced that these particular 7n7 and all of the 14n7 will give it to you.
I’m pretty confident the early Sylvania *sn7 timeline went something like this:
1) First versions of the octal based w versions made for the military with copper posts probably started in 42. Along with these the first 7n7, 14n7, 7f7, and 14f7 were also made with the copper support rod. I have copper rod 7f7 labeled Hygrade Sylvania, a name they dropped after 43. The Sylvania labeled 7f7 with copper post also have the green leaf logo on them which also points to being very early days. The grey glass 7n7 and 14n7 are unique in the Sylvania *sn7 world. The only other tubes Sylvania made with similar construction that I have seen are also their oldest versions of 6l6g, 6f6g, 6f8g, and 6c8g. There are probably others but they are all the oldest Sylvanias.
2) Next versions of at least the metal 6sn7w and 7n7 are made with a non copper support rod. I have never seen a Sylvania 6sl7, 7f7, or 14f7 with a support rod made of anything but copper. I have a Sylvania 12sl7 that has a support rod but because of the silvering I can’t tell what color it is. I assume it is copper but can’t prove it.
3) They kept making the metal base 6sn7w and 7n7 but now without a support rod at all. I’ve never seen a 14n7 without the copper support rod so I speculate they did not make them for very long.
What I still want to do is compare my 6sn7w to the 7n7 I have with the non copper support rod. I anticipate them to be the same tube with minimal if any differences. I also have an idea that the plate material or manufacturing technique changed with these over time as well. Seems like the oldest tubes have a lumpier black plate coating with less sharp detail. Then they went to a black plate with a very uniform, flat coating. After that they went to a grey coating that was so even it doesn’t even look like a coating at all. I *think* all the copper support rod tubes have similar looking plates and the 7n7 without a support rod looks different but I need to check.
@WildPhydeaux do any of your 7n7 with the copper support rod have clear glass? Do you have any pictures? I’d love to compare to the ones I have.