Hi everyone, I just wanted to thank everyone for the input again. I did further testing, so with the cover completely off, the resistor finally settled at 105C.
Deciding that I'll never be comfortable with slowly heating the board (even if its seemingly ok at the moment and no problem), I picked up a couple to measure against the original and replace with the one that seems like its the closest in terms of resistance, capacitance and inductance at least according to my cheap LRC meter. One was a 2W 1K which physically looked identical. One 5W ceramic.
I believe my meter may be way off but at least it was consistent between the resistors.
So I measured .995Kohms, 7.67nF and 1.37mH for resistance, capacitance and inductance of original 2W resistor
I measured .997K, 7.59nF and 1.38mH for the new 2W resistor
I measured 1.05K, 7.22nF and 1.39mH for the ceramic 5W resistor
The new resistors both claimed 5% tolerance. I installed the 5W ceramic and left it raised off the board by about 1cm. After 1 hour of the system running, its measuring about 82C with the cover off. Much lower than the 105C for the original 2W.
Now one thing is very odd and I cannot for the life of me figure out is why the amp sounds better. My friend who has better ears than me (he works in broadcast and listens for errors, glitches and stuff like that on commercials and content produced before it goes on air (via decent headphones) also commented.
So before doing the swap, I had the level pots for both amps set via an 8ohm resistor across the speaker terminals, fed 60Hz tone through the preamp into the amp and measured the voltage across the resistor. Did this for both channels for both amps. We listened to a few songs and both amps sound identical.
After the resistor swap on one - without anything else being changed like the amp level or preamp volume level, the one with the resistor swap to the larger 5W seems to reveal more clarity in instruments especially when things are complicated like classical orchestral music. Bass seems to have a little less overhang as if the woofers are under more control. More snap I guess. I'm not sure how this could be but we swapped back and forth and there is a fairly evident improvement.
I did research online and on some tube amp forums (which of course this amp is solid state), they talk about resistors having noise. This makes no sense to me but I don't know enough. Supposedly ceramic wirewounds having the least noise and sounding the best??
I don't even believe this resistor has anything to do with the signal path because I don't see a corresponding one for the other channel anywhere close to the output transistors. It only exists on the one side as far as I can see. Maybe its some component of the power supply or some other function like protection circuitry?
Anyway I modified the second one with the discolored circuit board and it now sounds identical to the first one I modified - which now both sound a bit better than the new amp which is stock. Aside from the extra level of clarity I hear, it does not appear to sound dull or bright or different. Just somehow more revealing of instruments, like someone cleaned my ears and I'm listening again LOL.
So I don't know whats happened but I prefer it this way.