I am learning to work on and repair to amps. I'm mostly a paint-by-numbers kind of guy, but I am graduadually leaning how circuit design variables effect an amps sound. I am aware of the safety precautions that are necessary and I'm learning more each day.
A friend brought me his Blues Junior 3 after it had stopped working. Upon inspection I see it blew a fuse inside because one of the el84's went bad. After replacing the fuse and putting in a couple of random el84 is I had knocking around. The amp seemed to be fine, but one of the sockets tended to get that tube very hot. I figured perhaps those 84's were not matched closely at all so I ordered a new set of matched el84 s. After putting this new matched set of el84 in, I'm still noticing that one of the tube sockets makes its respective 84 much hotter than the other one. I swapped the tubes to different sockets and the problem stays within one of the sockets and does NOT follow the tube. Although the amp now seems to be fine, I'm concerned that this failure will simply repeat itself until I find out why one of the power sockets is getting so much hotter. I am aware that many of this series of amps by Fender are often biased very hot. I plan to address that later by adding a pot in place of R51 and R52 for adjustable bias. As for now my concern is simply this mismatch of heat in the sockets.
Can anyone steer me toward which component I need to check to fix this overheating issue?
A friend brought me his Blues Junior 3 after it had stopped working. Upon inspection I see it blew a fuse inside because one of the el84's went bad. After replacing the fuse and putting in a couple of random el84 is I had knocking around. The amp seemed to be fine, but one of the sockets tended to get that tube very hot. I figured perhaps those 84's were not matched closely at all so I ordered a new set of matched el84 s. After putting this new matched set of el84 in, I'm still noticing that one of the tube sockets makes its respective 84 much hotter than the other one. I swapped the tubes to different sockets and the problem stays within one of the sockets and does NOT follow the tube. Although the amp now seems to be fine, I'm concerned that this failure will simply repeat itself until I find out why one of the power sockets is getting so much hotter. I am aware that many of this series of amps by Fender are often biased very hot. I plan to address that later by adding a pot in place of R51 and R52 for adjustable bias. As for now my concern is simply this mismatch of heat in the sockets.
Can anyone steer me toward which component I need to check to fix this overheating issue?
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