> short circuit from primary to secondary
That should not be fatal to speakers.
Short from B+ to one side of speaker winding.
One end of speaker winding is grounded, and speaker winding has very low DC resistance (<1 ohm). So about 7/8 of any DC current from B+ goes through winding, not speaker.
What is the most current that B+ can supply? 130 Watt output, say 240 Watts of DC from B+ normally, so 0.34 Amps steady-state. A transformer can maybe supply 10X rated current into a short. 3 amps.
7/8 of that 3A in OT speaker winding, 1/8 in speaker. 3/8 or 0.375 Amps in speaker. 0.375A^2*8r is 1.13 Watts of power in the speaker. A "130 Watt" speaker array can stand 1.2W forever.
Assume a *second* defect. OT speaker winding has gone open. All the 3 Amps possible from B+ flow in speaker. 3A^2*8 is 72 Watts of heat in the speaker. A "130 Watt" stage-speaker array "should" survive 72W for many seconds, though if DC the huge excursion will stretch the surround and just-maybe jump the voice coil out of the gap. It is also a race between speaker damage and melt-down of the Power Transformer supplying 10X its rated output.
So it could happen; but I'm real doubtful on the chance of two different faults (short P-S and open S) and in an amp which often works fine.
> amp suddenly got silent for three seconds or something and then sounded again, but with distortion at low frequences. And the speakers were hot!
Something is going on, but I don't have a glimmer.
The 3-second silence, then part-life, ought to be a clue, but I'm blank.
I assume the speakers are good hi-power jobs. (I've seen 100W amps with $30 30W speakers installed thoughtlessly then blown.)