Peavey VB-2. Blew the 1.6A HT fuse as is common with these, so replaced that. Looking at bias on the supposedly 'new' matched sextet (JJs) one was 50% higher PD than the others, which were not all that close to each other either. Coolest tubes were biased at 70% so the hotter ones were probably red plating, hence the blown HT.
In any case, after replacing HT fuse and biasing cooler, the amp makes 'bad speaker' noises when turned up, except I've tried several speakers and I know it isn't that. Doesn't seem to matter whether volume is provided by turning the master up, master down and pre-amp up, or just turning the volume on the bass up and hitting the strings hard. Changing bias doesn't affect it. Cleaned all jacks/tube sockets/switches. Did the chopstick test and didn't find anything obviously loose that would cause it. Did the dark room test didn't see any arcing. Electrolytics don't look bad in any obvious way. PS voltage isn't sagging in any appreciable way. Replaced each pre-amp tube individually, no change.
It's possible the output tubes are crapped out due to the stress, but I was told it came back from Peavey once for this condition already with the 'new' tubes and only worked for half a gig thereafter. In any case I don't have 6 matched EL34s on hand (how often do you see matched sextets required in an amp running 34s?? 6550s, sure.....) to check that.
Anything quick and easy I'm missing here to track this down? Anything less than quick and easy that should be obvious?
In any case, after replacing HT fuse and biasing cooler, the amp makes 'bad speaker' noises when turned up, except I've tried several speakers and I know it isn't that. Doesn't seem to matter whether volume is provided by turning the master up, master down and pre-amp up, or just turning the volume on the bass up and hitting the strings hard. Changing bias doesn't affect it. Cleaned all jacks/tube sockets/switches. Did the chopstick test and didn't find anything obviously loose that would cause it. Did the dark room test didn't see any arcing. Electrolytics don't look bad in any obvious way. PS voltage isn't sagging in any appreciable way. Replaced each pre-amp tube individually, no change.
It's possible the output tubes are crapped out due to the stress, but I was told it came back from Peavey once for this condition already with the 'new' tubes and only worked for half a gig thereafter. In any case I don't have 6 matched EL34s on hand (how often do you see matched sextets required in an amp running 34s?? 6550s, sure.....) to check that.
Anything quick and easy I'm missing here to track this down? Anything less than quick and easy that should be obvious?
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