> over my head here with a solid state amp.
> thinking there is a problem with an op am
> I cleaned everything. And now it works.
Take-away lesson: It is usually a connection.
In general, it hardly matters if it is tubes, chips, whale-oil, or dilithium crystals. The sexy stuff has to be connected with mundane plumbing or wires. When you have a problem with a toilet, usually the magic flush-action still works, the problem is a pipe leak under or inside the toilet.
True, connectors evolved (or devolved) with the technology and the times. Fahnestock clips had to be jiggled every few months. Eyelets on board was pretty solid. Elastomeric washers beat leather washers for toilet pipes. Hasty-soldered PCBs and their many-way connectors seem to need attention every few years.
And Out/In loops where signal must pass through switched jacks are always a sore spot. The contacts get plenty of air from the hole. Air tarnishes metal. If a contact is used a lot (such as the guitar hole) the tarnish gets worked off. If a contact is left idle for years, tarnish gets under the finger and breaks the connection.
> #8 was marginal, at 13.53vdc+
R156 and D52 *regulate* a raw ~~22V to a constant "16" Volts. The spec on the diode is 15.2 to 16.6V. The nominal operating current is a little below the spec test current, but I'd expect at least 15V.
And this is an area which on *other* Fender amps has been problematic. These parts run HOT and cook their guts or the PCB. On this design the ratings seem reasonably generous, unless they are tightly packed against other hot parts.
Study TP6 and R156, and the complementary parts on the negative side of that power supply.
Within reason. Ideally you'd lift the PCB and look for cooked/cracked solder joints. But if that is a hassle, and the voltage is "close", and the amp works, and it's for a customer (friend) who does not want to pay for all-day labor, let it go.