Hi, welcome to the forum.
That isn't why they do it, you are just guessing. Most amps have shorting input jacks. It is done to prevent noise. If your input jack didn't short to ground, it would sit there humming when no guitar was plugged in. So yes, the jack shorts to ground. Go ahead and be 100% sure. On many Marshalls, not only is there the shorting input, but extra contacts on that jack also mute the preamp. Same reason.
The resistor and cap across the output is not a crossover, it is called a zobel network. Go google that. Amps can go into oscillation for a variety of reasons. Amps are designed to be stable, and most are. Now and then some failure in the circuit or failure in the load causes trouble.
Shorting the input to prevent oscillation is pathetic.
The resistor and cap across the output is not a crossover, it is called a zobel network. Go google that. Amps can go into oscillation for a variety of reasons. Amps are designed to be stable, and most are. Now and then some failure in the circuit or failure in the load causes trouble.
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