Do you have the preamp tube and PI tube shields on? If not try keeping them on while you test.
You have the OT and speaker jacks next to the preamp tubes, you might have to put a shield between them, like you have around the OT.
The OT secondary wires should be twisted together tightly and tucked up into the chassis corner.
I saw this;
"I've attached a chassis pic so you can see my OT leads. The primaries are the blue, green and purple twisted bundle I have running outside the top of the chassis. The secondaries go to the speaker jacks which are in very close proximity to V2, but I have also removed those from the chassis and wired them in outside, and this didn't help either."I'm not exactly sure where you put all of this but, I'd try this test, unbolt the speaker jacks/impedance selector/line out jack and move them and their wires out and away from the chassis (to the left of the chassis with the controls facing you) and onto the bench
-away- from the input jack/guitar cable and with the preamp tubes shields on. Then try the amp and see if the oscillation stops.
And you should try using shielded wire from the input jack to the 1st tubes grid and on the other preamp tube grid wires and the PI input grid.
If it was V2(?) that seemed to be the problem area, then start there 1st.
And I'd move the input jack 68K R's to the preamp socket grid pins,
with as little lead as possible between the 68K and the tube grid pin. Like 1/16". Grid stoppers work best this way.
And I'd try grid stop R's, at least 10k, might have to go up as high as 100K(?) on V2B and V3A,
again with as little lead as possible between the 68K and the tube grid pin. Like 1/16". I'd probably start with 100K and see if that knocks it out, then try lower and lower values until it starts to come back.
Read this on grid stoppers;
http://www.valvewizard.co.uk/gridstopper.html(I saw that you had this, shielded wire/grid stop tight to the grid pin, on the 1st preamp tube before you disconnected it.)
And I'd try twisting the 2 power tube grid wires from the PI together tightly too. Better yet, use shielded wire. But it seems your problem area is before the PI. So start on the far input end of the chassis.
And I'd probably move the power tube grid stopper that runs over the screen grid wire and run it tight to that power tubes grid pin.
And I'd move that red B+ wire that runs the length of the board from under the components and twist it around the ground buss. And there's a 2nd red B+ wire coming off that same B+ filter cap, I can't see where it goes. Is it under the board?
Do you have the power section ground separate from the preamp ground? If not, because your amp has a -FB loop with a presence control, the PI, including the presence control should be grounded with the power tube grounds. The MV feeding the PI should be grounded with everything before it by the input jack. So B+ nodes A/B/C get grounded together and nodes D/E get grounded together.
Here's a link on grounding;
http://www.valvewizard.co.uk/Grounding.htmlIf it were me, I'd get rid of that 3rd 50uF/50uF can, too much B+ filtering, and put in a 20uF axel cap for B+ node D and a 20uF axel cap for B+ node E. The current draw is
very small on those little preamp tubes. (Too much filtering can/will make the amp too stiff for guitar. The B+ node C doesn't need to be that high a value either, 20uF would be plenty there.)
Or you can get small radial caps that will fit in a tight space. Someone here just built an amp using just small radial caps for the B+ filtering and I like to use them, on some things. They worked fine for me. I'd put them very close to the circuitry they feed. I'd run a tightly twisted pair of wires underneath, along the back side of the board, control side, from the B+ node C to the new axel caps. (But that's a different discussion.)
Any 1 of these things might be the fix or it might take a few of them together to fix it. To tame the oscillation in this amp it might need to be addressed at both the input and the output, grid/plate, of the preamp tube(s).
I'd try all these things with those plate bypass caps in place 1st, get rid of the large K (cathode) cap, then if the oscillation stops,
maybe I'd try pulling those caps 1 at a time and see if it comes back. Just to see/hear what happens.