Hmmm...
Sorry for the delay...
Was busy with year-end yard work that has to be done before the end of the year, before the snow flies...
Ok, you're having a "bias resistor" heating up on a PC - 122 - these radios are pretty small, compact and in light of how other radios are designed, extremely simple to work on and use - making these a popular radio for back when things were much simpler than today...
That also means that when one part starts to fail, it can take out others because of the same reason - LACK of support parts to reduce the chance for failure...
Heating up means there is a fail in there now, we have to sort this out...
IT may indicate a Bias diode is shot, onto a Blown Driver (Base shorted)
OR this may also mean an assembly issue, where due to the AGE of the radio, the heat sink insulation to mount them may show it's age and needs to be "refreshed" - by removing them , unsoldering - cleaning them up with alcohol and remounting and soldering them back in.
Ok, let's get you started, you may want to try to get there and look at this link...
http://www.cbtricks.com/radios/uniden/index.htm
The above is for UNIDEN - in general, for the work you're going to be performing you should know and be able to locate the different "ways" and values they used to in the "driver and final" and schematics for these radios.
If you can read a schematic, you're well on your way to fixing this problem and preventing it from occurring again.
The Driver uses a 2166 - NPN RF Power transistor - same type they've used in some other radios at the UNIDEN link above - so at least if you can not find a source for the 2166, you can cannibalize one from another radio that used one for, RF power OUTPUT (Yes they are strong enough to be used as FINALS in some AM-Only Radios) - although sounds "Hideous" and mean.
But to do such a thing, may need to be done. For many radios that got abused by their former owners may become the "organ donor" to preserve the life of it's brethren - so you can use a dead radio for, parts to keep the PC-122 operational.
As said before, sounds hideous, but once a radios' circuit board has been cracked in two because of an accident or a careless operator, the parts may not connect per the board, but doesn't always mean the radio cannot provide parts to revive other patients on your bench.
You can also find me at this link...
http://www.cbtricks.com/handyandy/
Where I spend a little more time on some details for the PC-122. The *.HTML they are written in - although I'd love to update those pages, the site that hosts it, has done some changes which no longer allows me the luxury of adding more tips and tricks I've learned along the way since those pages have been posted. Let alone update the html to a more modern look.
SIGH...
Anyways, let's get back to the Driver/Final and overheat issue.

Ok, you should have something like this in the back...

I'm going to stop here and see where you're radios pieces wind up laying...
What part(s) are heating up?