Ralph, note in an earlier post that the OP indicated he tried both of the taps the amp provides (4 and 8 ohms). Also, he indicated that the problem occurred even if the AC power plugs of the speakers were disconnected. That would seem to rule out the powered woofer section of the speaker as having anything to do with the problem. And I'm not sure that an unpowered electrostatic element can be microphonic.
Regards,
-- Al
12-15-14: Rluthy57My speculation, as stated in my initial post, was:
I disconnected the Martin Logans and hooked up a small pair of 6 ohm Phillips 2 way speakers into the amps 8 ohm taps and the ultra-linear bias fluctuation problem went away. Wouldn't this tell me that the amp is ok and the problem is with the Martin Logan Summit speakers? If it's the speakers I still don't understand why they sound so good when the amp is played in triode mode.
... if the bias readings do not fluctuate with those dummy loads in place, per my comments above it would not necessarily be indicative of a speaker defect. My suspicion in that case would be that some kind of interaction between the amp and the speakers is resulting in an oscillation.If an oscillation is occurring, at some inaudible frequency, the amp's feedback loop would presumably be involved, and therefore pretty much the entire signal path of the amp would presumably be involved. I see that the small signal tubes used in the amp are two 12AX7's and four 12AU7's. What type and make of these tubes are you using, and are they the tubes that were originally supplied with the amp? Just a guess, but perhaps changing the 12AX7's to lower gain equivalents might resolve the problem.
Regards,
-- Al