Grant wrote:
Probably rated for 100 watts, probably:
Poor little guy. I trust at least you're matching impedance???
I guess this isn't The Final Form, but watch out for that jack shorting-out on the speaker magnet; seems like it could be bad times for your new amp, rinkydink speaker or both
Don't worry, when I start gigging I throw some electrical tape on there maybe.
As for impedance matching, apparently one is supposed to switch the amp to 4 ohm output when running it into a single 8 ohm speaker in 60 watt mode. I'm not sure why, and haven't had the time to read up on it yet. Voodoo?
seller/shipper wrote:My God! I thought I did a great job too! I am currently in the hospital for six weeks. what can I do to make it right. I'm so sorry! my hospital number is ###-###-####.
Grant wrote:I re-sat all of the tubes, and the hum is gone, but this is still happening:
I guess I have to research this now. bleh.
Swapped the two outer tubes, same result. Noticed the the inner tube next to the glowing one was cold, when the other were warm. Letting things cool now before going in again. Turns out things that are glowing super-orange-hot stay hot for a while after removing power. I hope the burns don't blister. :\
Figured it out! The little plastic part that prevents installing the tube incorrectly had broken off of the cold tube, so it had, of course, been installed incorrectly. The fact that the amp still functioned is testament to the hardiness of tube amps and/or mesa engineering and/or blind luck.
Once turned right-way-round it warmed up nicely, and its neighbor no longer tried to outshine the sun.
I've decided I like 60 watt better than 100 watt, and tube better than FET. This is all based on timid whisper volume levels.