PRF members' tech journal
41Been toying with the 100W amp (above) primarily in the output and NFB areas. The OT I had was an ultralinear Hammond (1600 series.) Being that it is my first build, I decided to hook it up as described on the box, in UL mode. Worked great, sounded great. Being that I am never satisfied with something that works great or sounds great, I decided to add a DPDT switch to switch output section from UL to pentode mode (tapping the HT supply right after the caps & choke) Needless to say, it opened the amp up tonally speaking quite a bit... for about five minutes until it burned one of the tubes! When I got in it, I found that the plate resistor on the blown tube had drifted from 50 to 4.5k, and another tube (in opposite phase section from blown tube) had a completely open plate resistor. anyone have any thoughts on what could have caused this? My competing theories are: blown tube causes resistor(s) to fail vs. bad resistor causes tube to fail vs idiot should have left a perfectly fine sounding amp aloneI'd go with the third one were it not for the massive, albeit temporary, improvement in tone.