Not all circuit boards are created equal.
Glass/Epoxy boards that I have seen are kind of translucent light green will take more 'rework' than cheesy cheap boards. I have no idea what the cheapo boards are made of, but when cooked it charcoals nicely and eventually becomes low-level conductive. Traces of these boards lift more easily, but can sometimes be repaired by laying a piece of bare wire where the trace WAS and soldering it to what remains good of the trace at either end.
While you have the amp disassembled for repair, it may be a good thing if you make all 4 fuses replaceable.
Marks idea is pretty cool, and may make sense in this case of what sounds like limited clearance.
Glass/Epoxy boards that I have seen are kind of translucent light green will take more 'rework' than cheesy cheap boards. I have no idea what the cheapo boards are made of, but when cooked it charcoals nicely and eventually becomes low-level conductive. Traces of these boards lift more easily, but can sometimes be repaired by laying a piece of bare wire where the trace WAS and soldering it to what remains good of the trace at either end.
While you have the amp disassembled for repair, it may be a good thing if you make all 4 fuses replaceable.
Marks idea is pretty cool, and may make sense in this case of what sounds like limited clearance.