Amp came in with the screen supply resistor (R55) making intermittent contact with the board so when the kid would bang on top of the amp it would make intermittent contact and he would get some output.
I found that resistor had melted the solder away at the board connection and had some heat damage so I replaced it and soldered in a new resistor and I'm now witnessing this problem:
- At idle, all appears well, with 575V plates and 572V screens

, each 6L6GC is showing between 25-30mA plate current
- As I increase the input signal the plate voltage drops proportionately to the amount of signal that I feed it....
falling from 575V down to 480V (ish) at max signal, and obviously dragging all other voltages with it.
- At this time the plate current rises, and eventually will cause a redplate condition if amp is continued to operate at high output.
- Also the screen current rises to a point where I'm dropping 30+ VDC across that 470R screen supply resistor,,,with one side of the push/pull pair appearing to draw more current than the other side.
- I'm watching the bias voltage drift more negative and goes from it's idle reading of -65VDC to a max reading of -90VDC on one side and -78VDC on the other side of the push-pull pair.
- Watching it on a scope with dual probes it becomes obvious that one side is taking the hit more than the other.
- I removed one power tube on each side, and swapped some known good tubes in to eliminate the tubes and sockets.
- I also cleaned and retensioned the sockets.
- I have checked all diodes, resistor values, caps, etc., etc....

- I took a break from "troubleshooting" to do a cap job, and replaced all main filter caps and it has not affected the situation.
What am I seeing and what other info do you guys need to help me figure it out?
I consider myself a decent troubleshooter and I'm very interested to find out what I'm missing, and learn something new.
So far I have learned the term "bias excursion"
Thanks, in advance for any help you may be able to give.
I have confirmed that the attached schematic is correct because it matches the one inside the amp.