One of the things I'd try (in my reckless way) is grounding the grids of V2 - not on the pins though as there's a big danger of grounding the plate voltage and flash bang! Go back up the grid wires and ground the other end. Use a coupling cap as a probe and a croc lead to ground to be safe from accidentally grounding HT. This sounds like an oscillation problem and if you can stop it by grounding the first input grid then we have isolated the problem to one small area.
I am wondering whether you have lost a ground reference somewhere in the input area, allowing a grid voltage to drift upwards. Those 1 meg resistors on the inputs? I seem to remember some of these amps don't ground out the input contacts when the jacks are out - so if you lost the ground ref resistor too that might cause such a problem.
Agree with Steve that these are great amps. I have a couple of pro customers who use them in preference to anything they can get via endorsements etc, on sound quality and reliability.
I am wondering whether you have lost a ground reference somewhere in the input area, allowing a grid voltage to drift upwards. Those 1 meg resistors on the inputs? I seem to remember some of these amps don't ground out the input contacts when the jacks are out - so if you lost the ground ref resistor too that might cause such a problem.
Agree with Steve that these are great amps. I have a couple of pro customers who use them in preference to anything they can get via endorsements etc, on sound quality and reliability.
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