Apparently I fried the bias circuit by continuing to play my dual rec after I noticed the slightest (and I do mean slightest) crack in the third position power tube near the base of the tube.
It worked fine with no signs of any problems for at least 2 or 3 weeks after I noticed the crack. No blue glowing, no fuses blown, no hot running tubes, nothing. Then it happened.
It would blow fuses, so I decided to change out the power tubes. Got a matched quad of ruby 6L6GC mstr power tubes from dougstubes.com and I swapped them out myself since the dual rec has a fixed bias.
So I turned it on and the tubes were glowing blue for a few minutes as I left it on standby for about 15 minutes. Then I realized that they are running REALLY hot and then when I finally plugged in my guitar...THERE WAS NO SOUND.
NOOO!!!!!!
So I try like 47 different things just to be sure its the amp and not something else, and sure enough, this is what I was told by the amp repair guy I know:
"If you played it with the crack in it, you probably fried the bias circuit. Since there was a crack, the vacuum tube drew oxygen into the circuit which it isn't supposed to do and thus, fried the bias circuit. It will probably take about 3-4 hrs and $200 to fix when all is said and done."
Anyone know anything about frying bias circuits and what entails a repair?
It worked fine with no signs of any problems for at least 2 or 3 weeks after I noticed the crack. No blue glowing, no fuses blown, no hot running tubes, nothing. Then it happened.
It would blow fuses, so I decided to change out the power tubes. Got a matched quad of ruby 6L6GC mstr power tubes from dougstubes.com and I swapped them out myself since the dual rec has a fixed bias.
So I turned it on and the tubes were glowing blue for a few minutes as I left it on standby for about 15 minutes. Then I realized that they are running REALLY hot and then when I finally plugged in my guitar...THERE WAS NO SOUND.
NOOO!!!!!!
So I try like 47 different things just to be sure its the amp and not something else, and sure enough, this is what I was told by the amp repair guy I know:
"If you played it with the crack in it, you probably fried the bias circuit. Since there was a crack, the vacuum tube drew oxygen into the circuit which it isn't supposed to do and thus, fried the bias circuit. It will probably take about 3-4 hrs and $200 to fix when all is said and done."
Anyone know anything about frying bias circuits and what entails a repair?