Re: higher wall voltage. Easily overcome with a bucking transformer which can be homemade or store bought. Mine knocks down the wall voltage with a switch. either -6V or -12V, from 120V to 114V or 108V. Best I can figure is that wall voltages changed upward somewhere in the mid to late sixties/early seventies from 110 to 115/117 then later up to 120...actually higher in places and at different times of the day. So for amps from the fifties and early sixties I'd shoot for the 110 range...later amps up to 115 at least up to the eighties.
To my way of thinking, that’s a
much less “user friendly” solution than fortifying the filter capacitors, but it would work; but I think I would suggest a variac rather than invest in a fixed transformer.
Far more useful for other applications, and adjustable to give your rig the
exact voltage required, regardless of the specific wall voltage in any venue that might need “massaging”.
But the underlying issue goes
beyond wall voltage IMO.
Obviously the increased average wall voltages from 1957 as compared to modern day are a contributing factor, but I think it’s more of a basic design flaw of the original Dynaco design. The OEM can caps in the power supply are just not rated at a high enough voltage for the OEM power transformer, and can cause the can cap’s first section to see higher than its rated voltage
every time the amp is turned on. The OEM caps are rated for 525 volts, and the B+ can easily hit or exceed 585 volts during start up, largely because the rectifier heats up and begins conducting before the power tubes heat up and start drawing current. Even the beefier and costlier 550VDC can caps available now are being stressed beyond their ratings, albeit claiming a “peak” rating of 600VDC.
Plus, the inside of a gigging amp is a pretty hostile, high temperature and high vibration environment for any components, and IMO a rating
higher than the anticipated voltage is preferable, at least for the first stage.
And… That’s if you decide to stay with a
tube rectifier, which Sunn decided to eliminate (wisely IMO) in 1969-1970.
Even
worse news; of course with a SS rectified there is
zero lag for heating before conduction starts, and because of the more efficient operation of the SS diodes over a vacuum tube rectifier, the cap can be slammed with even
higher voltages, without
any "lag" for the power tubes to start conducting.
However, that being said I have several old, regularly used Sunns that still sport their original can caps, and they test and sound fine, so what do I know?