There is a negative DC bias voltage applied to the grids of the tubes. If you lose this voltage the tubes will run wide open and blow the fuses. That is a likely explanation. A cold solder joint in the bias circuits could be the culprit or some part that is intermittent. These can take a while to track down and many times the people at the factory don't want to put in the time necessary to find it.
I think the mismatched tube theory is bunch of balogna. It might cause some tubes to run hotter than others but won't intermittently light them up and blow the fuse. This is the kind of crap you get from techs who can't find the problem and just want you to go away.
Not being familiar with the layout of your amp limits the ability to troubleshoot. Do you have a schematic?
When you say not the same set each time, do you you mean that sometimes it is the left channel and sometimes the right?
After it blows the fuse, can you just replace the fuse and it works again for a while?
I think the mismatched tube theory is bunch of balogna. It might cause some tubes to run hotter than others but won't intermittently light them up and blow the fuse. This is the kind of crap you get from techs who can't find the problem and just want you to go away.
Not being familiar with the layout of your amp limits the ability to troubleshoot. Do you have a schematic?
When you say not the same set each time, do you you mean that sometimes it is the left channel and sometimes the right?
After it blows the fuse, can you just replace the fuse and it works again for a while?