This Tweed Fender Blues Junior came in the shop and the complaint was that fire was coming out of it. Fire indeed!!!
My guess is output tube anode short of some kind, that's about all I can think of off hand that can cause the entire trace and most of the circuitboard substrate to just evaporate. It's got a standard 2 amp mains fuse which ain't blown but, you know, I didn't check the HT fuse to see if it's the right value... sticking a higher than specified one in there can indeed cause fire if a short happens... I'll have to look at that in due course. For now it's mop up the burned soot, carve out some paths for new wires and try to stitch the circuitboard back together again. This thing is a mess... pity.
Oh yeah, order up a new matched pair of EL84/s as well.
(The circuitboard shown is the underside of the tube socket board, V4 and V5 are the EL84 power tube sockets).
My guess is output tube anode short of some kind, that's about all I can think of off hand that can cause the entire trace and most of the circuitboard substrate to just evaporate. It's got a standard 2 amp mains fuse which ain't blown but, you know, I didn't check the HT fuse to see if it's the right value... sticking a higher than specified one in there can indeed cause fire if a short happens... I'll have to look at that in due course. For now it's mop up the burned soot, carve out some paths for new wires and try to stitch the circuitboard back together again. This thing is a mess... pity.
Oh yeah, order up a new matched pair of EL84/s as well.
(The circuitboard shown is the underside of the tube socket board, V4 and V5 are the EL84 power tube sockets).
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