... I've been posting that I've had all the Primaries disconnected, what I meant it I've had the primaries connected to only to the Power switch from PT, to 2amp fuse, to the standby switch. And none of the secondaries connected to any part of the circuit. I had the Reds to the Rec. socket, (with no tubes of course) the Yellow HT to rec socket. and the link to the standby disconnected.
"Primary" is the "input side" of the transformer. For your amp, this is the Blue, Black and Brown wires than connect to the a.c. cord, switch and fuse holder.
"Secondary" is the "output side" of the transformer. You have Yellow wires (5v); Green & Green/Yellow wires (6.3v) and Red, Red/Yellow & Red/White wires (680v CT, 540v CT) for your secondaries.
You said "primaries" at least once where you may have meant secondaries. This caused confusion.
Do the Following:1. You mentioned you really had the primary to the power switch, fuse holder,
and standby switch. Unsolder the Red, Red/White, Red/Yellow, Green, Green/Yellow and Yellow wires from the PT to the first thing they connect to.
Insulate them (wrap end end with electrical tape or heatshrink or wirenuts);
make certain none of these loose ends can contact anything.2.
You only 1 primary tap. You will use
Blue and Black, because you reported high wall voltage.
The Brown wire must have its end insulated (heatshrink preferred, or electrical tape or wire nut) and tucked out of the way. It will not be connected to anything inside your amp.
3. Connect the a.c. cord black wire to the tip of the fuseholder, connect the side-contact of the fuseholder to one lug of the power switch, connect the
Blue wire of the PT to the other contact of the power switch.
Solder the white a.c. cord wire directly to the Black PT wire. This connection should be well-insulated with heatshrink or electrical tape.
4. The Standby switch is not connected to anything.
5. Install a fuse and turn the amp on, with your lamp limiter. Pilot will not turn on, nor will anything else. You will not have any d.c. volts in the amp, because there is no output from the PT (its secondaries are not connected to anything). The lamp limiter should faintly glow and the fuse should hold.
We are trying to eliminate variables, and what I described only has power cord, fuseholder and power switch wiring in place. If the fuse blows, it will be because there is a fault in that wiring, in the PT itself, or because you're allowing the secondary wires to contact something (they
must be insulated and not contacting anything to get a valid test).