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Thats my problem, thats what i dont understandTo forward bias the base emitter junction of Q33 you will first have to get the amplifier working and drive it hard enough to have a current greater than about 3 amps in the load. Q30 and Q33 are to provide overload protection for the amplifier. When they conduct they shunt the drive to the emitter follower stages to prevent the amplifier from trying to provide more output current than it is designed to handle.
The first step in fault finding is study the schematic until you understand how it was designed to work.
Les.

Both left and right chanels are the same layout,When KISS says "the other side" I think he means the positive side of the left hand channel.
I also did notice this as the diode symbol is reversed, hence so is the polarityThe polarity of the probes when testing the base emitter junction of Q40 will be the opposite way round as Q23 is NPN and Q40 is PNP.
Could this be be because pr1 and pr2 are not fitted and the bias can not be adjusted to stop clipping ?This amplifier has what's called a VI limiter. It's common in high-end amplifiers or amplifiers that might be subject to abuse.
The transistor i tested was not from Q29, it was just an old one i had lying around,Your new transistor tester confirmed my suspicion that Q29 was faulty
So would you like me to retest the B E junctions with the probes the other way round like in post #236 ?,