Thanks guys. Are there any factory built guitar amps that employ the diodes on the rectifier plates, I mean off the top of your head? ...
I can't think of any off the top of my head, but I don't have every amp from every manufacturer memorized either. Gerald Weber recommended this addition since at least the late-90's.
... 1N4007s are so cheap, one would think many would do this. Cheap insurance is a bargain. So why don't we see this employed more often? ...
A manufacturer would probably hope/assume/know the fuse would protect the amp in the case of a rectifier failure.
But that's not why Weber suggested it: What happens if you're playing a show and the rectifier fails? Okay, the fuse pops and you put another in and that pops. Got another rectifier handy? Even if you do (and most won't) how long does it take to do the swap & replace the fuse? What if you're in the middle of a song? What's the embarrassment worth to you?
So Weber was thinking of this from the standpoint of bullet-proofing the amp so it won't fail during a performance. And you might not even know your tube rectifier failed unless you hear the missing sag.
On the other hand, a manufacturer might only look at how many complaints they get (in the form of warranty repairs) for a shorted rectifier. It's a "user replaceable part, manufactured by someone else. And their fuse may be sized to prevent damage to the PT. So adding the diodes may not make economic sense to them after building the 10,000th amp with those diodes.
Thinking about this some more, I can't say I've seen any guitar amp using fixed bias which has some mechanism to protect the amp in the event you lose bias voltage to the output tubes. Could be as simple as a socket with contacts loosened over years of use. It would probably take some form of solid-state servo circuit to monitor tube current & understand whether proper bias is present. So parts & engineering required for a failure mode which is low risk/high impact, but very unlikely to happen within a warranty period...
... Interesting that Ceriatone does this. ...
Well, Ceriatone doesn't "build amps" as far as I know. They draw layouts and sell kits. And they can incorporate anything that the buyer thinks is necessary, maybe because the addition was discussed a lot in books/forums.