Is it safe to use a variac to adjust line voltage lower to what it would have been in the old days on a guitar amp?
I've seen or read some comments that suggest it is not safe. Looking for clarification.
Two issues: grounding & filament voltage. Filament voltage is not a
safety issue
per se. Each tube type will want a minimum filament voltage to avoid tube damage. Lower filament voltage may also affect the tube's output. E.g., 6V heater tubes want at least 5V. So make sure not to use a variac in such a way as to drop heater voltage too low, below the tube's operating threshold.
Grounding is another issue. Some old EICO VTVM's such as the venerable 221 purposely use 2 prong power cords & isolate the unit from chassis-earth ground. Otherwise, use of the ground (common or black) test lead will make a short circuit (as with, say the Heathkit IM-18). I agree the EICO 221 with its metal body is dangerous in the event of a chassis ground fault.
Anyway, using the old equipment : KNOW YOUR GROUNDING SCHEME.
BTW: I've collected all the manuals for my vintage test equipment. They contain a lot of info & are very informative; they are repositories of old knowledge. Especially good 'cause I missed-out on this info in its day.
EDIT: re grounding: a variac will not make a guitar amp unsafe. The PT offers isolation of the chassis from earth ground. If the chassis is "live" (with relation to earth ground), due to an internal fault OR in the old "Westinghouse" design w/o a PT, then the amp is unsafe to begin with. The variac will not make it more unsafe. The problem is the mistaken belief that a variac provides isolation, which it does not. A variac is an "autotransformer" -- it has only one coil -- not a primary which is physically isolated from the secondary like the typical trannie.