talbany wrote: It makes the EL34 plate and screen too high,
520v on the plates of an EL-34 is not that high ( Early Marshall Plexi voltages)..I would leave a 22k in there and find out why it blew.. Perhaps you have a bad 34!
With 518 on the screens a 22k should get you under the 300v max rating 12ax (50v cathode)range on the PI (w/24k tail) Music Man Dumbles (same PI) running 700v use a 47k dropper there..Cathode follower should be sitting somewhere between 150-180v
Tony
Thanks for your comments, lets look into it. What I was thinking is that the screens might be too high, what do you use as a high limit on screen voltage?
The fuse failure was associated with about 15 minutes of playing when it suddenly lost some gain. It got better or about 5 minutes then it happened again and the fuse went. No sparking, red plate, smoke, hot components or any visible signs of badness.
So with a dropping string of 22k, 10k, 5k the voltages were
EL34 Plate 520V (I did not measure the screen)
EL34 cathode current was set to 30ma at that plate voltage
V1b Plate 224
V1b Plate 230
In terms of the schematic I posted.
The main reason I'm doing the project is because of this forum. For example, my wife was less than impressed when I brought her into the basement to see the naked MANZAMP chassis in all its glory sitting on the floor among a mass of wires ( "...thats it? ")

If not for the ability to share the build on this forum I'd really not have much reason to even do this.
In terms of commercial enterprise, I was joking with myself that I was going to time it from the moment I posted the schematic to the appearance of a Ceriatone Manzamp. But seriously, the schematic I posted will need a lot of re-working to be sold as a commercial product.
Bottom line is I think it would be great to see any of the commercial builders engineer this into a viable product to sell.
My main interest the Manzamp is academic. I want to try and figure out more about how Dumble designed and built his amplifiers.
"You feel like you're floating on a football field filled with marshmallows." -Dumble