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they use a hybrid design with 12AU7s driving voltage and the FETs driving current which I do not even understand.This amp is 1,100 Watts in 4 ohms.
That is 66V at 16 Amps.
A 66V signal.... hey, a 12AU7 can easily swing that! Might need a good high B+, but no big deal.
16 Amperes..... well, a 12AU7 can deliver 16 _milli_Amps. Cool, we only need a thousand tubes!
However _ONE_ big modern MOSFET can dump 16 Amps easy. Doing it at high voltage and power might need a dozen or more (or less).
12AU7 are $10 each, so $10,000. Big MOSFETs are $10 each, so $120.
The MOSFETs are (probably) working at unity voltage gain. Giant "cathode followers".
True, we could have got that 66V with solid-state driver. But then it would be no tubes at all, and competes with a million other all-sand boxes.
I think I have seen the guts of a related amp. My thought? I would not stick my hand in there. The 12AU7 run at lethal voltages. The MOSFETs can pass enough current to weld your rings to your finger-bones. The topology was not simple, fault diagnosis would be a mind-mess. And if like many other modern products, the physical layout makes no sense, was not intended to be serviced.
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should I go ahead and give up so I can start on my 18 watt without feeling guilty?I say yes.
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LS electronics in St Louis is the place to send these but I am unsure about recommending someone I dont knowGoogle turned up LS' lame website, and one review, which is unfavorable, but the customer was really in the wrong place, and the owner replied nicely.
http://plus.google.com/108743721928408826604/about They say they are authorized to warranty-repair Ampeg, which means they can't have a lot of outstanding complaints.