Today, after playing my Mission 5E3 for about 2 hours, suddenly the sound went and I saw smoke rising. I pulled the plug and had a look inside. The only sign of burning I can see is a well burnt out screen 470R resistor on one of the power tubes. The resistor still reads OK though. This is a Mission 5E3 240V version with the Mission choke kit.
I was playing through an attenuator (Weber MiniMASS) which is how I normally use it. What was different this time is that the B+ was about 375V instead of 350V which I usually have the B+ set to using a string of zener diodes. However, today I removed the zeners from the PT CT in preparation for a VVR (a form of Power Scaling) circuit I will install soon. The amp appeared to be biased fine and played fine up until the problem.
So my question is this. What could cause a screen resistor to get this hot or what could cause so much current to flow?
Could this be a sign of a tube failing? If the screen resistor still reads good (cold) then why did the sound stop?
I have replaced both screen resistors with 2W ones and tried to trace out any problem. I haven't switched on yet to check the voltages in case there may be another problem.
I was playing through an attenuator (Weber MiniMASS) which is how I normally use it. What was different this time is that the B+ was about 375V instead of 350V which I usually have the B+ set to using a string of zener diodes. However, today I removed the zeners from the PT CT in preparation for a VVR (a form of Power Scaling) circuit I will install soon. The amp appeared to be biased fine and played fine up until the problem.
So my question is this. What could cause a screen resistor to get this hot or what could cause so much current to flow?
Could this be a sign of a tube failing? If the screen resistor still reads good (cold) then why did the sound stop?
I have replaced both screen resistors with 2W ones and tried to trace out any problem. I haven't switched on yet to check the voltages in case there may be another problem.
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