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    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

Bench Testing a Tube Amp Without Tubes

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I have a Sherwood S-5500 III integrated tube amplifier that has not been used in decades. My plan is to restore it and have on order new capacitors for the power supply. It has the original tubes which I will remove and test in a tube tester. The tubes are (5) 12AX7 (Telefunken) and (4) 7868 (Sherwood). It is solid state rectified. Before I power it up with a variac and dimb-bulb tester, I will clean all of the controls with contact cleaner because I'm sure they are crunchy.

To avoid damaging the hard to find tubes, can I power it up and measure the power supply voltages without the tubes installed?
 
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I have a Sherwood S-5500 III integrated tube amplifier that has not been used in decades. My plan is to restore it and have on order new capacitors for the power supply. It has the original tubes which I will remove and test in a tube tester. The tubes are (5) 12AX7 (Telefunken) and (4) 7868 (Sherwood). It is solid state rectified. Before I power it up with a variac and dimb-bulb tester, I will clean all of the controls with contact cleaner because I'm sure they are crunchy.

To avoid damaging the hard to find tubes, can I power it up and measure the power supply voltages without the tubes installed?
Before removing tubes or any other tampering ; connect a variable DC source top the B+ and (slowly)
increase voltage while observing current. 100V per hour, stop if current does not go down to zero and figure
out what is leaking.
4-5 hours later your electrolytic caps has passed ( or failed) Then connect speakers and power on. Connect
a source and check sound. If anything is missing or wrong then fix it.

Tubes are replaceable, your transformers are not.
 
You have absolute control of the B+ current and does not need to have any AC in the initial testing.
When B+ is at the anticipated voltage AND no current is drawn you know that B+ and caps are without shorts.
Testing one item at a time is usually beneficial.

Next step is to figure out if any bias supply works ( power on with removed B+ or removed power tubes)

Finally power on with signal and listen for good or bad sound.
 
My plan is to restore it and have on order new capacitors for the power supply. I
Sometimes that is worth a 2nd look. After you are satisfied with the tests with no tubes,
cut the B+ lead from the rectifier to the first cap at the half way point.
And insert something like 5-10K, a few watts at the break
Hookup a VM to watch B+, whatever you have & stuff the rectifier back in.
Apply power, the voltage should slowly increase. It may be only a short time or could take hours,
the caps may very well reform to working condition.
Unhook the power occasionally, check that the first cap is not getting hot. 🙂
 
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Then keep things simple. Just use a fused Variac, connect 10 ohm 2W resistors to the output,
and slowly turn the Variac up, starting at 0, to around 60VAC.

Then gradually increase the Variac over 30 minutes or so, until stopping at 120VAC.
Let cook for an hour or two while observing, in case something happens.
 
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