PCB gets me in a bad mood. Kind of like cars at some point in the 80s went from serviceable in the driveway to "we'd rather you not work on your own stuff."
People hear you work on amps and the next thing you know it's oh here's this radio, record player, microwave lol not really. But the newer amp conversation I have can be along the lines of "some of the guts in this amp are borderline disposable in terms of quality, the hassle to even get to the point of a 'simple repair' can easily lead me to the desire of throwing this out the window." Ok so I'm not gunning to be the neighborhood repair guy.
The Blues Jr is a popular amp but decisions like mounting tube sockets holding hot biased tubes directly to PCB has been haunting surviving examples, not to mention the jacks

So I had enough of all of that and got full of myself and told a guy I'd rip out that stuff and put in handwired components for what that amp cost originally. I was just barely ready for the learning curve that ensued but today I corrected my last dressing blunders and she came to life.
The operation is everything I had hoped for all the way up to the onset of distortion which can get this ratty edge to it on the mid and high end. I'm eager to track this down and after replacing tubes and trying a couple speakers, reflowing connections, it's still there. I realized the only transformer I kept was the OT which is intended for 6BQ5s and now running 6V6 (also tried 5881s with a bias adjust), but am I wrong to assume the 8000 Ohms primary impedance works for either 6V6 or 6BQ5 pairs in push-pull?
The owner will mostly be after clean tones but when everything is perfect up to the point of breakup and then the breakup has an inharmonic edge to it, I'm wondering how to best approach this. All voltages are within 5-10% of the published schematic and the 6V6 tubes are right at 28-30ma and 400VDC on the plates. The only mod I added to the circuit was a bias pot and SS rectifier followed by a 5-watt 100 Ohm dropping resistor connected to the first reservoir cap.
As always any help appreciated
cv