I had a 1971 Fender Virbrolux Reverb in my shop one year ago. The customer wanted it retubed, recapped, and blackfaced. Simple enough. I did the work, the amp sounded great and the customer sent me a lot of referral work. About 3 weeks ago, he called to say the amp started sounded "crappy" - from his description, it sounded like the power tubes were wearing out. I got the amp, took a listen and tried biasing in a new set of power tubes. No change. The sound of the amp is very distorted - notes beating against each other at higher volumes, but you can tell at lower volumes that the amp is not right. At HIGH volume is sounds like blown speakers - I tried another cabinet, but speakers are not the problem.
It also sounded like maybe one of the new filter caps failed, so I went ahead and changed them all (5). No change in the symptoms.
The problem occurs in either the Vibrato or Normal channel, so I moved to the Phase Inverter. I tried a new tube (actually tried all new preamp tubes), but no change. Since I had blackfaced this amp, I looked for a failed component in the phase inverter, and went ahead and rebuilt it - new caps and resistors. No change.
I moved to the power tubes. I found a bad pin on each tube socket, so I replaced each socket, with new resistors on each socket. No change in the symptoms.
I made sure I checked the negative feedback circuit and everything checks out OK. I replaced the 100 ohm resistor and the 820 ohn resistor. No change in the symptoms.
I tried a new OT. No change in the symptoms. I tried a new choke. No change in the symtoms.
Tonight, I played through the amp while I measured the bias current draw. The problem is that one tube is pulling much more current than the other tube. The 6L6 closest to the rectifier is pulling 120 ma when you strike a hard open low E. The other 6L6 pulls only about 65 ma doing the same thing. I checked the idle bias voltages on the power tubes and I'm seeing about -46 volt on each tube. All the components in the bias circuit check OK. The bias ground from each tube is through a one ohm resistor, so I changed them and made sure the grounds were solid. No change in the symptoms.
All the voltages in the amp are OK. I also hit all the solder joints with the iron just to be sure...
So, I have an amp that sounds unbalanced, and it certainly is. Does anyone have a suggestion on what to check next, please?