you're always coming down on me.
i wasn't complaining, just not giving into what my story was 100%.
the model t is fine for me, but for what we needed at the time on our record, it wasn't, i needed more out of it, it worked out that we used a Marshall Jubilee because my T hadn't shown up yet. I'll play more with it on Monday, i'm running 4 ohms into it so it should be going well. i'm going to take it home and record different settings. not really to locate an issue, just to give people some ideas on how it sounds.
All you have said is that you don't like the sound. I don't know what you were told or what your expectations are, and it seems that your expectations are doing flip-flops. Be a bit more specific.
This is what I think I understand so far. Please feel free to correct any misunderstanding I might have:
o You bought a 34 year old amp off of ebay. You know nothing about the history (repairs, mods) of the amp.
o There is a smorgasbord of tubes in the amp. One of the output tubes is unknown, but there is hope it's a 6550. The age of the tubes is also an unknown.
o You haven't taken the amp to a tech. The power tube bias is unknown. The condition of the electrolytic caps is unverified. The supply voltages are unknown. The circuit has not been confirmed to be original.
When you purchase an old amp - from anywhere - there is no basis for an expectation for the amp to perform "as new".
At a bare minimum, especially for a tube amp from ebay, it is pretty much 100% certain that the tubes need to be replaced. 80% plus of all tube amp problems are caused by the tubes.
Electrolytic caps and other parts don't last forever. Electrolytics in particular can have a short life if the amp isn't used very often. Using the amp frequently extends the life of electrolytics. If the amp has been stored for a period of time, it is usually 100% certain the electrolytics need replacement as without a voltage on them frequently, they will dry out.
The bias needs to be checked because it may have been modified in persuit of that elusive ultimate tone.
And last but not least, the amp may have been "abused" and suffered some damage that has not been repaired. The plate fusible resistors is a good example. If these are blown, you will essentially lose the tube it is connected to - and you may be completely unaware that this has happened as the reduction in power is usually not enough to notice. Depending on which tube or how many tubes, you can get distortion at most volume levels.
One quick check you can do to check the plate resistors is to power up the amp (with speaker connected as always of course) and look at the power tubes in a darkish room. Flipping the standby switch to the operate position should produce a noticeable blue glow inside the glass envelope of all output tubes.
If this blue glow is "excessive" it usually means the tube needs replacement. If the blue glow is non-existant, it can mean a bad tube or the plate resistor is blown. If you switch the tube that doesn't glow with one that does and the tube now has a glow in the new position, and the one that did glow now doesn't, there is a high possibility that the plate resistor is blown.
Sorry that the amp doesn't meet your expectations - but until you verify that the amp is in full operating condition... as I said before, you really have no basis for any expectation.