Hey fellows,
I have a Classic 30 that a man dropped off. He said that it runs too hot and smells bad. I took one look at it and noticed that he had a 16ohm resistor across the speaker leads. I asked him about that and he said that that is the way he uses it. He said he never uses a speaker and plays shows at clubs and casinos and plugs the "Ext. Speaker" out into the house sound system. He says he wants that to stay the same, because that is how he uses it.
So, I opened up the amp, and sure enough, it gets very hot on the circuit board right above the power tubes. I measured it at about 185 degrees on the board in the neighborhood of the power tubes and there is some visible signs of high heat conditions.
The amp is working correctly and the bias is about what it is supposed to be. So here are my thoughts.....
When you plug anything into the ext. speaker jack hole, it activates the 8 ohm tap on the output transformer. So, immediately, the 16 ohm resistor across the speaker leads becomes a mismatch. So, the easy answer is PULL TWO TUBES. That solves the impedance mismatch, and half as many tubes creates significantly less heat. Sounds like a winner. But....
I have no idea what kind of load is being presented to the amp by plugging the ext. speaker into the house sound system. So, my only concern is... is there a chance that somehow the house sound system was making the amp behave itself, and would pulling two tubes somehow disrupt that situation?
Please advise,
Dave