Yea, sometimes tired tubes can fart a bit (for lack of a better word) when powering down. While you're waiting for the new ones, one thing you can do to test whether it's the tubes is, to the extent that it is reliably happening in the right channel, switch the tubes between the channels in the CJ and see whether the sound jumps channels. If it does, there's your culprit. If not... (It's also might not be a bad idea, if for no other reason, to make sure the tubes are sitting right and hadn't been somehow loosened during shipment. You never know).
As for the "zipping" noise from the amp at shut-down, unless it's really aggressive I wouldn't be all that concerned. When you power down an amplifier it lets go of a lot of juice and is sometimes audible through the speakers. Usually there is an automatic muting switch that will mute the speaker taps so that you don't have to listen to this process in its full glory (or potentially damage you speakers) as the power bleeds off, but itÂ’s not unusual to get some sound at power down. Sometimes (rarely, I would guess) a muting switch can go bad, though. A batch of Bryston amps went out a while ago (one of which ended up in my living room) that had a tendency for the muting switch to fail (which mine did). It was not a subtle thing. Sounded like a significant static discharge, through both channels but entirely un-uniform, that would quickly crescendo hard and then fade off fairly raggedly (describing sounds is a bitch, no?). It was really loud and pretty much sounded like the speakers where being torn in half. Alarming. If you get the sound while powering down the amp (and while nothing else is on at all) I would guess what your hearing is something leaking through or around a muting switch that appears to be doing a better job on one channel than the other. Keep us posted.
As for the "zipping" noise from the amp at shut-down, unless it's really aggressive I wouldn't be all that concerned. When you power down an amplifier it lets go of a lot of juice and is sometimes audible through the speakers. Usually there is an automatic muting switch that will mute the speaker taps so that you don't have to listen to this process in its full glory (or potentially damage you speakers) as the power bleeds off, but itÂ’s not unusual to get some sound at power down. Sometimes (rarely, I would guess) a muting switch can go bad, though. A batch of Bryston amps went out a while ago (one of which ended up in my living room) that had a tendency for the muting switch to fail (which mine did). It was not a subtle thing. Sounded like a significant static discharge, through both channels but entirely un-uniform, that would quickly crescendo hard and then fade off fairly raggedly (describing sounds is a bitch, no?). It was really loud and pretty much sounded like the speakers where being torn in half. Alarming. If you get the sound while powering down the amp (and while nothing else is on at all) I would guess what your hearing is something leaking through or around a muting switch that appears to be doing a better job on one channel than the other. Keep us posted.