Hi abajor - it would still be prudent to build the very simple light bulb current limiter device if you are going to be working on or building guitar amplifiers. link was provided.
Listen up!
You need a light bulb current limiter. You're making quite a few errors -- nothing wrong with that (is how we learn!) -- but you need to protect yourself and your equipment. Variac with ammeter is fine, but you want something in circuit that actually limits how much current can flow when you make a mistake.
Vast majority of experienced folk on this forum use them when powering up a build for the first time until you know that all is well.
Edit: Don't mean to pile on. I was writing this while mresistor was posting.
Ok. I'm not sure how it would have helped with my initial problem after the amp worked fine for months and randomly smoked the original transformer the second time.
The current limiting bulb at the recommended wattage ratings sounds like an extremely poor fit for a fender champ as it will allow ~60-100 Watts worth of current to flow through the primary, considering the champ is ~15 Watt amp I'm wondering how that would protect the internal circuit in the champ? Would it be a sufficient to prevent the champ from burning up its secondary if it can allow 4 - 10 times the power the champ is rated for to flow? Shouldn't I be using a bulb rated to a lower power dissipation?
I'm more interested in understanding why the dielectric in my new capacitors were compromised. The rectifier diode junctions were all intact.
From going back and reading more, I suspect the reason I killed the original power transformer was that not using a current limiting resistor caused me to have significantly more inrush current stressing the secondary as well as a longer charging period due to doubling the capacitance.
But as far as I know there was never a chance the capacitors had reverse voltage applied to them. Having them fail under normal charge is still surprising to me, but maybe there is something more experienced tube circuit engineers know of.
Ironically the Fender champ is the least ambitious circuit work I've done, and I've done almost all of the work with schematics and a DMM.
My first tube circuit modification was rewiring my Fender PA100 to essentially use the Mesa Boogie Mark 1 circuit. It still works great. I just knew enough to keep well away from live B+ and make sure its discharged long before getting my fingers near it.
I am not really experienced working with tube diodes, and am not convinced there is any great reason to keep it in the champ. Inrush current killing the secondary wasn't something I was aware of.
The light bulb current limiter sounds very cool, but I am right in assuming I need a much lower wattage rated bulb for a low wattage amp, since current is on demand?