mitch m wrote:
The several hundred kohms I mentioned is with no tubes in the circuit so no load. Your actual resistance could vary. The key thing is you saw the reading rising as the filter capacitors charged and you didn't read a dead short.
Did you do the output transformer checks?
If everything reads good, and all the wiring is right, you should be able to go through the startup procedures again.
Great thanks so I did just that. I installed my replacement rectifier (tube) and fresh 2 amp slow blow fuse. Powered up. No smell, no smoke, no sparks in the rectifier tube and no blown fuse, even after taking it out of standby. I proceeded to check the DC voltage at the fiter cap and the plate voltage on the tube sockets (none installed except the rectifier). All read about 420. Now the manual says that these volages will be higher than what is documented on the schematic (or in the manual) with no tubes/no load, but that seems very high compared to the documented voltages; some of the voltages are much lower; as low as 155 on pin 1 of V1 for example.
I don't know if this is an indicator that something is still wrong or if this is normal and I can proceed by installing tubes and re-checking the measurements. Advice?