Turns out that today (Sat) was the only time this week that I could get in some time on the amp.
Replaced the power cord with a grounded one. Installed the solder terminal strip, mounted the thermistor, and connected the power cord to it. Cleaned up the rectifier tube socket and connected all wiring back. Found where the original wiring was wrong, and why the power stayed on regardless of the switch position. That works now. Tested the tubes and brought it up again on the lamp limiter. When I had it on full line voltage, the current draw was only a fraction over 1 amp. Took some voltage readings:
Line voltage: 123.3vAC
After thermistor: 120.3vAC
B+1: 410vDC
B+2: 337vDC
B+3: 302vDC
V1-pins 2&5: 74.9vDC
V1-pin 3: 0.83vDC
V2-pin 2: 217.7vDC
V2-pin 5: 248.9vDC
V3-pin 3: 398.1vDC
V4-pin 3: 398.7vDC
V3/V4-pin 8: 29vDC
Forgot to record a voltage at V2-pin 6. I'll get one the next time I have it powered up.
Amp is dead quiet, but that may not be a good thing at this point. As Input 3 (Instrument) is the on one connected, I plugged a cable in and touched the tip. No sound. Both Volume pots and the Tone pot at full. The only time I heard a sound from the speaker is when my meter lead tip touched a tube terminal for voltage readings. Then, I would get a pop or a hum, like I would expect.
At this point, I'm thinking that I've got nothing coming from the front panel, and/or V1. So, I'll stop my troubleshooting, until I can clean that up. Depending what I find with the signal cables, I may replace all three. But, not until I've disconnected them from the pots, so that I can ring each one out and verify each connection on the tube end. And, record the resistance of each pot.
Anyway, it was enjoyable getting in some shop time. One repair that I will make towards the end is to the Flot-A-Tone badge. Originally, it had three very small nails holding it. The one in the middle is missing, and the badge is broken just to the right of where the nail should be. I think I know of a means to attach the two pieces of 'pot' metal back together. Then, I need to find a replacement for this miniature nail.
More to come. Have a good one.
Jack