So I've built this 5F6ish amp and it sounds great with no issues.
Yesterday the customer (a pro player) calls me in and tells the amp has blown 3 mains fuses at startup (or a few seconds after start up). He brings the amp back to me, and the amp works dandy in my shop. I do the following tests :
- PT test : I run it with a pair of EL34 biased really hot at 80mA each. After 3 hours, the PT is cooking hot, but no issues and nothing blows.
- just in case, I remove the power tubes / rectifier (I leave only the 3 preamp tubes) and "cook" the PT for an hour. It gets slightly warm.
- I swap the GZ34 with an equivalent Weber Copper Cap to save a couple of watts from the PT, just to make it run cooler.
- I test the original 6L6GC tubes (Groove Tubes 6L6GE). Make them run for 3 hours biased really hot at 60mA or so each. Lightly tap on them in the end and the thing don't bulge.
- The amp sounds great. No hum no nothing, just great sound.
- Today I plug it in and and everything's ok.
The customer take it back, switch it on and FUSE BLOWS. He replaces it and now it works.
The amp has 230V primary voltage. Weber Copper Cap GZ34 equivalent at the input. No standby switch. 2 6L6GC biased @ 40mA or so each with 470V B+. Mains fuse is a 1.5A Slo Blo.
Now when I think of it, while doing measurements right after the amp was done 3 weeks ago, the tip of my meter inadvertently went touching both pin 2 and pin 3 on a 6L6 socket (plate to cathode). Big electric arc for 2 or 3 second and then the fuse blew. I'm still using the same tubes as they seem to work perfectly, despite this misadventure.
How comes this sucker blows fuses, and how comes they seem to blow at the customer's room?
Could the plate to cathode short kinda ruined one tube, or worse the OT and be the cause of this fuse blowing problem?
I'm stumped. The player's got a big show on friday and I'm extremely worried. I lended him a Blackface Twin Reverb as a backup but the band prefers my amp by far.
Thanks for any insight.