• 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.

SET cuts out when switched off

I’ve got a 2 watt DIY SET amp built on the Decware zKit Schematic (including the anniversary modifications/bypass capacitors)
https://www.decware.com/newsite/ZKIT1.pdf

I’ve been using this amp for about three years and when I shut it off if the source is still playing the music fades out over the course of 10 seconds or so and starts to break up before going silent. The last couple of weeks I have noticed that it started cutting out instantly when switched off. Yesterday I switched it off and it cut out instantly; I changed interconnects and turned it back on. The tubes lit up and everything looked normal but it wouldn’t produce any sound. I let it sit about 10 minutes and tried again. Still no sound. I powered it on today, about 16 hours later, and it is working normally again. Anyone have any ideas on a diagnosis for these symptoms?
 
I had an odd problem when I added a DC blocking capacitor to the input of a Quad amplifier. I forgot to add another grid resistor to ground, and over time the capacitor charged then blocked the input signal. If I switched the amp back on it would not play, but then the following day it was OK again. I think the input tube had lived with a positive grid voltage for some time and had to be replaced.
 
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The OP provided a link to the schematics.

I'd second the theory of an open grid leak R.
Power up / power down could then freely pull the grid voltage way up (tube fully on) / down (fully cut off) thru the coupling cap.
But that would affect only one channel ... unless both grid leak Rs shared a common solder joint / wire to gnd which is broken.

By the way, since when is it custom to connect G3 of a pentode with a cap to cathode ? Never seen that before ...
 
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As seen (first post now contains the link to the schematic), no grid leak resistors in first stage, only potentiometer.
The common mistake is to believe that input potentiometer/volume controller always solves the grid leak problem.
 
I was wondering if having DC on the input could also cause the OP's problem? That quite low value for the grid leak probably mitigates that, but it could explain both channels. Or even something mechanical like a broken connection on the interconnect?