did you hook up the 120VAC correctly? The the gnd lead must be attached to the chassis alone , not with the center taps or filtering caps grounds. The signal shielded cables in your amp must be groun.
ed only at one side to avoid loops. Did you use grid stoppers on preamp as well as on power tubes ? If it is a cathode bias amp, did you bypass the resistor with a cap ? Start by the first preamp tube. Sometimes, no grid stoppers at this place cause problems like you described.
Colas
The 120 is grounded to the chassis alone.
Then I have a Shared ground for the:
-Heater Centertap
-Filter cap
-Fuse for high voltage
-Output speaker taps (I unhooked this and tried grounding this to another ground and nothing changed)
The other ground I have is at the opposite side of the chassis for the inputs and the bus.
*One thing also to add is that if the volume is low and treble is turned down, it does not make the squealing sound.
When volume is low and I turn up the treble pot (Finger on tip of guitar cable) it makes the high pitch squeal.
If treble is on zero, and I bring up the volume it will make the noise once I get past 12 o'clock.
I have issues with high voltage dc wires inducing noise on signal wires sometimes. Use a wooden skewer or pencil to move wires around and see if anything gets worse or better.
Poorly grounded pots, filter caps and signals will cause hum too.
Center taps on power transformer need to be grounded well too. If there isn't a center tap for the heaters, you can use the 100ohm to ground parallel resistors to cut back on hum.
I'll try looking at the DC wires, I know I have the Filtercap wires zip tied close to the PT HighV wires, also one of the OT primaries, is that a problem?
I'm deff going to start moving wires around and see if that changes everything.
Lastly, I have built this exact model twice, and they both do the same exact thing.
Attached is a photo of the PT section