• WARNING: Tube/Valve amplifiers use potentially LETHAL HIGH VOLTAGES.
    Building, troubleshooting and testing of these amplifiers should only be
    performed by someone who is thoroughly familiar with
    the safety precautions around high voltages.

One channel of A88-T stays cold. Most propable problem?

Good day one and all.
I have a Cayin A88-T Mk 2, that's been doing it's job quite well for a while. After transporting it to a friend, I noticed that the higher frequency had left in the right channel, it all sounded very muted. A quick frequency sweep confirmed this. I noticed that the power tubes in one channel stayed quite cold, although the heaters are glowing normally.
I first suspected the tubes, and swapped them with the other channel. The problem persisted with the tubes plugged into the right channel. I then suspected a bias problem. The tubes in fact refuse to be biased, the meter just goes completely to the right and doesn't react to adjustments. However, when I pulled the tubes and measured the bias voltage at the socket, it was identical to the left channel and also regulated identically when I turned the potentiometers. All the other voltages, especially anode voltage, was equally identical to the left channel. I haven't opened the amp up, because I had to leave my friend's place that day. I'm a little stumped though: It's not the tubes, not the bias, not the B+ - do you have any good propositions where I should propably look first when I go there next to open the amp up?

Thanks a lot and best regards from Germany
 
as-3.jpg

resistors in cathode of kt88...... Maybe two resistors are burnt out.Check the voltage of G2.
 
Hey.
Thanks for the input!

There's a total of one valve technician in the greater area, and he's booked for more than a year. And though I lack the knowledge how to design tube amps in detail, I've at least built a few from schematics and understand a few bits and pieces.

I don't think the amp has power tube biasing via cathode resistors, but fixed bias. There is a bias potentiometer, and there's a negative grid voltage.
 
The output tubes also have screen resistors, one per tube. The same applies to those.
Measure them with all power removed and the AC line unplugged. All four resistors should be the same.
Replace any bad parts, and clean the related screen switches.