A mis-wired relay could certainly account for no output from the clean channel. But what about that odd behavior when trying to measure voltage at node D? Operator error? Red herring? Something else???
That's a GREAT question, wish I had the answer.
Operator error isn't out of the question, I'm the first to admit. It is a simple voltage measurement. Had the negative lead clipped solidly to chassis common. Powered up the amp. Took the measurements. 3 were good, then D was odd. I went back and forth between A, B, C, and D several times and they were consistent in how each read. I can't think of anything I did to have caused it but welcome critique.
D acted like a capacitor that would discharge through the meter then recharge when the meter was disconnected. The longer the meter was disconnected the higher the voltage would climb.
Two things changed between the strange readings and the good reading. Tubes were installed and reading was taken with a different meter, Fluke 87V. Personally I suspect the Fluke 113 meter. Does it bother me enough to spend time to prove it for certain? Not yet. I simply won't use that 113 meter any more.
The amp was working and sounding GREAT for the few hours I played through it last night. If it begins to malfunction I'll certainly begin with voltage readings...