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So offer to refund the man's money as it was a known problem to you (and us) that obviously didn't get fixed correctly. It's the right thing to do,,,, imho anyways. Cheers,Robin
From my experience its highly unlikely that the amp itself is still having a problem.OTOH, right after shipment is when we experience 90% of the problems we have with the power tubes. I was pretty sure Gopher was having power tubes initially, but in further conversations with him, it sounded like there was another explanation.All of our amplifiers have current limiting resistors in the output section. These resistors have been proven effective at getting the power tubes to work more closely with each other, and work very much like the emitter resistors do in a transistor amp. In the early days when we first started using this part, we installed 3-watt devices that on paper *should* have held up, even if the tube arced, but in practice some of them did fail. So about 10 years ago we started using 5-watt devices, which hold up quite well. We rebuilt the output section of Gopher's amp with these parts. So If the amp is having an issue now, it really will be the fact that the power tubes are unhappy due to shipment.Due to its age we felt that while the amplifier was here it would have been a good idea to update it to the latest level (which reactivates the warranty), but Gopher didn't want to do it. I almost feel like we should send him a demo unit just so he can hear how much the circuit has improved since his amp was built 12 years ago. But despite that, we have found that with sort of work the amplifier needs to break-in, which usually takes a couple of weeks.
In the late 90's I owned a pair of AS M-60's Mk2. I remember going thru tons of fuses. They would often blow for reasons unknown to me -- no associated blown tubes, or any other amp problem. When replaced the amps would work 100% fine....till one blew again.Logically, I figured there must be some sortof of underlying problem, but the occurrences were fairly spaced out, so I never really investigated.I simply kept a generous fuse supply on hand, replaced them when needed, and got back to the music. No biggie, no sweat. I figured just a part of owning such a tempermental thoroughbred specifically, and tube ownership in general.
I had a power tube crap out on me today, out of pure coincidence. Some fireworks implicated the faulty tube at least, and upon close inspection both fuse links were gone. Bought these from tube depot right at the end of June...so far 4 out of 10 are now garbage.
There is a simple way to make power tubes last longer. If you have purchased new (untested- and most 6AS7Gs from Russia are untested) power tubes for any amplifier from a 3rd party tube dealer, the thing to do when you get the tubes is to put them in the amp and put the amp on Standby for 72 hours continuous. I know it sounds like a pain in the rear, but this can double the life of the tubes and cut the number of arc-over events to 1/3rd.
The M-60 Mk2 was a manual-bias amplifier. On the early versions (pre-2000), if the bias was even slightly over the mark, it would blow the fuse. The later amps had an increased fuse rating.