It was with great pleasure I soldered the last capacitor and put down my soldering iron. I immediately began checking resistance values and DAMN! They were **all** well within allowable limits. (I think it was just a quirk of my meter that the values that were starred (*) and supposed to "settle" at certain readings showed as zeros. When something is erratic or out-of-range that's sort of what my meter does...)
I plugged in the tubes, connected the power cord, and with a lot of trepidation flipped the "on" switch. The room was too bright for me to see the tubes glow, but I took my first voltage reading, the "HV+" pads, and got 390. Really close!
Now I was starting to feel smug and went to measure the voltage at Terminal 1-- it came to 414v, which 1s 18% high, but I figured I was OK.
Then--- without warning--- a loud "snap" sounded from somewhere on the board, kind of like the sound a cap gun makes. I immediately shut down the power and inspected everything but couldn't see any charring or damage. Hoping it was a one-time thing, I turned on the power switch again and took a reading at Terminal 2-- 248v, very good.
Then--- you guessed it--- SNAP! Again I turned off the power at once, but saw nothing amiss anywhere. Just for the h*** of it I went back and re-soldered every joint that even SUGGESTED it might be questionable. I turned on the amp again, and after about twenty seconds--- SNAP!
So the status seems to be that I can turn on the amp and it will run silently for about 20 to 30 seconds before the loud SNAP! I figured it had to be arcing of some kind so I checked everywhere anything looked too close to something else. I saw no black marks that might suggest arcing anywhere on the aluminum board or on any of the wires or components.
I tried again, and --- 20 seconds --- SNAP!
Now, I'm kind of mystified and I wonder whether anyone has run into this, or if not, if anyone has an idea about what could go SNAP! in this way. I've kinda been thinking I'll try it at night to see if I can spot an arc (and make sure the tubes are glowing). (They didn't seem to be throwing significant heat or making any electrical hums at all...)
But... any ideas anyone?
Many thanks,
Leon Malinofsky