Strange amplifier problem


Dear mates,
I started to experience a strange problem with my amplifier. Here is the description.

1. I'm listening to the music, everything is OK. Then I make a break for about on hour or two. Want to listen again, but there is no sound, though all tubes are glowing.

2. I check the CD player (change tracks, switch off and on, etc.), it is OK.

3. After some time I see a spark near the IEC inlet and check the fuse - it is blown.

This problem occurs for the second time during the last week. It is obvious that something inside the amp makes the fuse blow.

Some time ago I noticed another problem - when the amp is running, the left output transformer runs warmer than the right one. I wrote the dealer and the manufacturer, but company's president answered that this was normal because the left transformer is closer to the tubes (!!!), though this is not the case - they are symmetrical. The company's president either does not know what his company makes or deliberately ignors my problem in order to rule out any attempts to bring the amp back to him.

My numerous questions about the transformers and fuse remain unanswered.

Before bringing the amp to the dealer, I will appreciate any opinions of those who encountered similar problem and to whom such symptoms are familiar.
transl
It would help to know which amplifier you are talking about. I assume when you took your break, you switched everything off? I always thought the fuse is there to protect the amp from power surges, etc. Do you use an electric filter or surge protector before the amp?
3. After some time I see a spark near the IEC inlet and check the fuse - it is blown.
Did you see a spark or was it a clear glass fuse that blew? As far as blowing the line fuse I would think something is wrong with the amp. Something is causing an over current condition. Since you mentioned 1 of the transformers being hotter than the other would make me believe that maybe a tube is starting to short out whether a rectifier or output. Its very rare for transformers to go bad but they do.
Do you have a captive power cord? I might try changing the power cord before anything else?
Sounds like a bad capacitor or a tube with an internal short is causing excessive plate current to flow through the left channel output tube(s) and transformer. See if the plates of any of those tubes are glowing red, which would confirm this.

If the coupling capacitor between the driver stage and output stage of the left channel were breaking down, it could result in a large positive bias on the grid of the corresponding output tube(s), causing this excessive current flow. As could a marginal short in a tube, that might be temperature sensitive and therefore only appear after operating the system for some amount of time.

A short in a speaker cable or connection, or in a speaker driver itself, also come to mind as possibilities, although that would not seem consistent with the intermittent nature of the problem.

Regards,
-- Al