I'm rebuilding a Bell&Howell 179 conversion, and replaced the original PT with a ClassicTone 40-18021. I followed a fairly typical new amp startup procedure with one exception: I did not form the new filter caps. At all. Schematic, pics below.
With no tubes in, I have 750V across the rectifier tube pins. With no LBL and a 5Y3,
B+ at A node was ~420V with a bias voltage of -34V.
After I put the 6V6s in, the B+ voltage dropped to around 370V at A node, right in the ballpark, but the voltage kept bouncing around in small increments.
When I tried to measure voltages at the plates, the highest voltage I measured on a given tube immediately began to drop as I watched the meter, at a rate of about 1 V/second. And as the 6V6 plate voltages dropped, the cathode bias voltage went up. When the bias voltage headed north of 38V without slowing down, I stopped and removed all the tubes until I can get this voltage problem sorted.
Possible issue:
Here I should mention that while my original version of this BH179 had a "D" node filter cap, I left it off this version. The D dropping resistor drops right off the C node to power the 6SL7.
==> Is that missing "D" filter cap the cause of this steadily dropping voltage?
Voltage is really leaking away, so I'm sure I've got a hidden connection to ground at some point but I haven't found it yet. Is there a way to figure out electrically if I have such a hidden ground? All the B+ dropping resistors test nominal. I've tested the reservoir cap; it's within tolerance. Should I unship the others and test them?
Has anyone ever seen this, or knows how I could track it down?
Thanks in advance.