I had hum and smoke in a Classic 30 recently, and it was due to a burnt diode: see my recent thread below ("Hum and smoke from Peavey Classic 30").
The burnt component was one of the two diodes tied to the power tubes' plates. I replaced the diode with two 1N4007 in series.
When I turned the amp on again to check, a resistor got burnt and went in smoke: it's R67 (see schematic attached).
I must say that I don't know if the resistor was burnt before replacing the diode, or if it got burnt after the diode replacement.
I apologize for the brutal question, but I do not know what to check to cure this amp: what can make this resistor burn?
The burnt component was one of the two diodes tied to the power tubes' plates. I replaced the diode with two 1N4007 in series.
When I turned the amp on again to check, a resistor got burnt and went in smoke: it's R67 (see schematic attached).
I must say that I don't know if the resistor was burnt before replacing the diode, or if it got burnt after the diode replacement.
I apologize for the brutal question, but I do not know what to check to cure this amp: what can make this resistor burn?
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