... The strangest thing happened with the cathodes. I got readings when the amp was off on some on some of them. Also I've had high input voltages in my house before, but it seems strange to me that I get really high input voltages only on V1 & 2.
Tube & pins layout/schematic volt number numbers I actually got
V1
pin2 180 292 (wow!)
pin 8 1.3 .78 amp off/amp on 10. blank
V2
pin 2 180 292 (ouch)
pin 8 1.3 .079 amp off/ amp on 1. Blank!
V3
pin 1 400 453
pin 3 & 8 connected 8.2 .07 amp off/amp on 10.blank!
I think where you have "Pin 2" written above that you really meant "Pin 6"? Pin 2 is a grid for all 12A_7 types, and should be zero.
Also, you should measure d.c. voltage with the amp on but the Volume control on 0. No benefit is gained by turning the volume up (and it may confuse other readings).
For all pin 8 connections which read low (essentially zero), you should check that the tube
1. Has the heater lighting up
2. Has good firm contact in the socket (not so loose the tubes want to fall out)
3. Has continuity from the tube socket pin to the cathode resistor and from resistor to ground; Verify by measuring esistance with the amp off from the tube socket pin to ground (it should match the value of the cathode resistor).
When I was in the Navy, they called the condition I think you're seeing "Balloon/Rock". You have a high supply voltage from the B+, which connects through a plate load resistor to the tube plate. The tube cathode has a resistor which connects it to ground. If the tube draws current, there is a voltage drop created across each of these resistors.
On the cathode side, you read that voltage as a voltage at the cathode which is increased above 0v (ground voltage) by the voltage across the cathode resistor. In many Fender amp stages, this will be something like 1-2vdc. On the plate side, the voltage drop across the plate load resistor is apparent because the voltage on the plate pin itself is lower than the supply voltage by the amount of the voltage across the resistor.
If the tube is not passing current, the voltage drops across the resistors don't happen (Ohm's Law: Voltage = Current x Resistance; no current, no voltage across the resistor). The cathode then drops, like a rock, to ground voltage (0v) while the plate elevates like a balloon to the supply voltage.
So where you had odd readings, it looks like your tube isn't passing current. The connection to the tube plate looks okay (because there is voltage there), so now you need to check that the cathode has good connection to ground through the cathode resistors.
The outlier possibility is that the heaters aren't lighting up (the tube won't pass curent if the heaters don't work) due to a wiring problem or an actual open heater in the tube.