Hello everyone,
a customer brought me an old Shade amp (French brand from the 60's / 70's) which is a straight up clone of a Deluxe Reverb except for two 220R/5W plate resistors on the GZ34 rectifier.
He was having a problem of intermittent sound, so he opened it and witness for himself what I had mentioned to him last time I worked on this amp: these waxy cardboard eyelet board get hella conductive in the right/wrong environment. But as he was chopsticking around he realized that the mains wire that was touching the rectifier plate resistor was starting to melt.
He brought it to me and sure enough, as soon as I hit the standby switch, the temperature of those resistors rises to more than 212 degrees F in about 30 seconds.
- General current draw doesn't change and stays at around .9A at 230Vac on the mains throughout the process
- No power tubes = plate resistor stay cold
- new power tubes don't solve the issue
- new rectifier doesn't solve the issue
- the voltage drop on those 220R plate resistors is at around 38Vdc at power up and steadily go down as temperature rises (by the time they are around 212 degF, the voltage drop is around 30Vdc)
If the rise in temperature was accompanied by a surge in current draw I would assume something is wrong downstream, but except for the rectifier plate resistors getting smokin'hot, there's no symptoms. what do y'all think?