Cathode Resistor: 133.4 (stock value)
This resistor itself looks like the original part form when the amp was made. So regardless of the schematic, I'd tend to call "135Ω" the right value.
FWIW, my own amp was worked on before I got it, and the previous tech paralleled 2 resistors to trim it to about 130Ω.
The schematic voltages are not making sense to me. A 390V supply with 295V on the plates ... A 390V supply with 300V on the screens across a 1K is 90mA. What am I missing?
The schematic shows the output transformer center-tap taking voltage from the EZ81 output & 1st filter cap.
However look at the chassis photo, and the center-tap (Red wire) is connected to Pin 9 (G2) of one of the EL84s. Follow the Yellow wire also attached to that pin, and you'll see this is after the 1kΩ resistor between the 1st and 2nd filter caps.
Turns out the output transformer & power tube plates come after the 1kΩ resistor, hence the big voltage drop.
I checked my amp, and the OT center-tap is after the 1kΩ resistor. I measured voltages as follows:
Outlet Voltage: 117v AC
Rectifier Output: 371v DC
2nd Filter Cap (after 1kΩ): 286v DC
EL84 Screen (Pin 9): 286v DC
EL84 Plate (Pin 7): 281v DC
EL84 Cathode (Pin 3): 10.43v DC
Cathode Resistor: 130.2Ω
Cathode Current: 10.43v DC / 130.2Ω = 80.11mA
Idle ~10.8 watts per tube (not correcting for screen current)
Drop Across 1kΩ: (371v - 286v) / 1kΩ = ~85mA ---> 5mA for the preamp, 80mA for EL84 plates & screens.
The amp is biased cool, and has low plate voltage already compared to the schematic. I'm worried it wont' be able to bias correctly without extremely low plate voltages as-is, so my hunch is there's something else that's wrong.
Looks like the schematic is wrong. About 290vdc seems right (and this amp gets plenty-loud with that voltage, which is not-far from the max EL84s were supposed to get according to their data sheets).
As for low plate current, I'd say make sure you weren't plugged into a lightbulb limiter while taking readings. I initially had my amp connected to one, and was getting about 7.2v across the cathode resistor, and more like 220v DC at the EL84 plates.
If you didn't have a lightbulb limiter in place, I'd suggest trying a different pair of EL84s. You may find others bring the plate current & idle dissipation up.
And remember, if the amp sounds good, then it is good. You can tinker out of curiosity, but if it were my amp I would probably leave it as-is.