I renovated and set up a Fender Twin Reverb amp for a friend - an early 70s silverface version. It needed the usual stuff - tubes, electrolytic caps, some resistors replaced. When finished, the amp sounds very good, really good, but it seems to generate excessive heat after about a two hour running. The area around the 4x 6L6 power tubes gets very hot, hotter than normal IMO. Here's some specs:
B+ = 450 Vdc
on the power tubes:
Plates = 448 Vdc
Grids = -52.0
I set the bias for 30 mA per tube, 60 mA per side.
The guy likes clean guitar sounds, he plays a Gretsch.
I re-grounded everything, especially the filter grounding and power transformer grounding at the usual area, at the power transformer bolt on the chassis. The amp is very quiet. These numbers are pretty typical for a Twin of this era.
What else could I try or address to try and get this heat situation under more control (besides add a fan)?
I'd appreciate any on-point advice,
Bob M.
B+ = 450 Vdc
on the power tubes:
Plates = 448 Vdc
Grids = -52.0
I set the bias for 30 mA per tube, 60 mA per side.
The guy likes clean guitar sounds, he plays a Gretsch.
I re-grounded everything, especially the filter grounding and power transformer grounding at the usual area, at the power transformer bolt on the chassis. The amp is very quiet. These numbers are pretty typical for a Twin of this era.
What else could I try or address to try and get this heat situation under more control (besides add a fan)?
I'd appreciate any on-point advice,
Bob M.
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