scott wrote:even without a rectifier tube in there, it's blowing fuses? my guess would be the rectifier tube socket needs replacing, like maybe it arc'd and now has enough residual carbon that it's always gonna arc. you would see visible charring on the socket, though, and a mini lightning bolt when the fuse blows, right?
I don't see charring on the socket. BTW, this uses a 6x4 rectifier, which has a 6.3v heater, not the normal 5v of most tube amps.
scott wrote:I don't understand how you had time to find that the rectifier socket was seeing power if it was instantly blowing fuses.
That was sloppy writing on my part. Instead of seeing, it sould have said "the only placed power could possibly get to."
scott wrote:before you unsolder all the leads coming off the PT, you can (with no power applied) measure the resistances of the PT secondary. for the 6V heater, 5V heater, and high voltage supply, each pair of wires should be non-zero. any that are center tapped should be non-zero from the center tap to ground, and also each half should be roughly the same.
How far from non-zero should it be. I measured those the other night, and I think the resistance measured about 10 - 20 ohms, which seems low to me, but wasn't technically a short.
scott wrote:another guess for me would be that the 5V winding or 6V winding are shorted from someone putting in tubes that draw more heater current than it can handle, like EL34's in an amp that can barely handle 6V6's, or a 5U4 rectifier in an amp designed for a GZ34.
measure the resistances of the PT secondary and check for signs of arcing on the rectifier socket.
The amp did come with 6L6s. My hunch says the PT is friend from overstressing. I'll double check the rectifier socket.
Ben Adrian