Problem with Bryston 14bsst


I seem to have an anomoly of sorts. I have a Bryston 14bsst paired with my deHavilland tube preamp. The music is perfect. I run a Wadia 302 through the pre with very nice results. The other day I tried an old Raytheon 6sn7gt tube in my preamp. I immediately heard loud hissing etc. from my right speaker but before I could shut down the system, the thermal breaker shut down the right output on the Bryston. It was extremely hot. I of course removed the tube and put my old 6sn7 back in the pre. Everything seemed fine for a few days. Yesterday, I turned on the preamp to let the tubes warm up for about a half hour. I got distracted and forgot to turn on the Bryston too. When I did turn on the Bryston it again got extremely hot on the same side as previously. I shut it down. I tried the system again later and everything seemed alright...however now it is doing it again. The Bryston heats up immediately upon the introduction of the preamp. I tried the preamp on the cd output selector and the tuner output selector...same thing...lots of heat on one channel. Here is the kicker. Just for the heck of it, I ran my Wadia directly in to the amp. The amp stays cool and everything is working! Looking at the history of when this started (bad tube) could I have done something to the output of my preamp that is sending a nasty signal of some kind? I look forward to any help as I am quite upset. I dread sending my Bryston across the country...or the preamp for that matter. Or what? thanks, Jim
jppenn
Well, the preamp could be doing what you guessed or the Bryston could be damaged (as you fear). Have you tried switching the left and right channels between the preamp and the Bryston? I.e., connect the left output of the preamp to the right channel of the Bryston and vice versa. If the Bryston overheats on the opposite (left) side, this would suggest the preamp has a problem. If the Bryston still overheats on the right side, it's likely the problem is in the Bryston.
Try swapping your left and right 6AH4 tubes to see if the problem changes to the left channel. I can't be certain, but I had a similar problem with my UV when a 6SN7 Tungsol blackplate went highly microphonic, and may have shorted. I believe this damaged the 6AH4s. Swapping in a new pair of 6AH4s brought things back to normal.
I would suggest a different approach. If one channel of your preamp has caused damage to one side of the Bryston, it will likely cause damage to the other side. Is this what you truly want to test? It's one thing to swap cables and channels if you have no sound, but if damage has been caused, why risk damaging the other side? Before doing anything else, put a meter on the output of the preamp channels and see if there is anything significantly different between them such as DC voltage, a much higher output level, etc. Also, put your cables on the meter and check for any differences as well....and flex the cables a bit while you do this.

So unless you are willing to take the risk of destroying the other amp channel, I would be weary of following the advice of the other posts.