Ok I did more messing around today. I turned out all the lights near it, it was pretty dark, and I played around and could get the popping to happen off and on but never once saw a visible arc of any kind. I thought that maybe its distorting because it was biased a bit too cold so it was distorting early so I adjusted that a bit, looking at different bias levels between maybe -50v and about -45V and I think I even went shortly to -38 but then it seemed to stop outputting almost any sound ( was i hitting the quiescent point where the tube no longer can conduct?) During different points of the biasing, I was getting between 8 and 11mV off each tube depending. I believe I got about the best sound at about 8.1mV on all tubes, but I didn't write it down as much as just tinker. If it was 8.1 mV
Which, of course, is way low for that tube.
Then...

I also accidentally was monkeying with trying to get voltages to calculate plate dissipation and accidentally shorted through one of the 1 ohm 1w resistors and blew it up. /sigh. I knew there was a reason they tell you to connect, power up, read, power off, repeat etc, I'll have to get another 1 Ohm so I can get that tube working again so that one isn't taking half the load. It still plays well. I think part of the hum has been found in two locations.
1. I realized that the reverb transformer is the same direction as the output transformer and touching it. I removed one screw, and rotated it away from the OT and a decent amount of hum went away.
2. I also noted when I was probing the heaters that when I did so, and created a good path to ground, a lot of the hum went away. (I'd removed the 100 ohms that blew earlier due to the 2/3 pin burnout of heaters debacle).
I'll restore those, and hope that helps a lot with hum. (I'll have to redrill the second hole for the reverb transformer in a slightly different location and tighten it up in that new spot. That way it has an alternate rotation off 90deg and is also no longer touching against it )
/sigh, tomorrow I'll run to my local shop for the resistors and get those in, and then give er a whirl again.
Side note, I don't see a big change in hum with or without the guitar cable now that I tested that either.
Edit: clarity and missed my '2' even though I wrote it out :)
~Phil