This is a absolutely fascinating thread. I would have already thrown the amp across the room after all that shit!!! I admire your perseverance Glen
Thanks for the support. I would have possibly chucked it but it probably would has landed on my foot, these things are heavy.
The saga continues. The reason for the fuse blowing is one driver has blown on b- left channel which I was running at the time. I fortunly have been using the varic to power up each time and hear it load up right away. I switch to the DImm Bulb and confirmed the high draw. After finding the problem I fired it up with only left fuses in all was ok. This had to be what was causing all the issues, right?
I then put in the right fuses and find there is a short in that side. So will have to pull those to find driver gone in that side. Lot of damage done at not to high current with one channel only driven.
I will stop now till I have the 009 sil pads.
So did the driver blow on its own, I had an other order of on transistors come with a defective one ,
Or did the 007 sil pads do all this damage and leak the transient signal,
Or is there still a gremlin hidding in the bowls of it.
I am now hoping it is the pads, because that is the only difference in my material list that I can come up with.
The low wires , although did stick through to far , probably did not touch anything after all