Finally powered up this 1966 Fender Super Reverb after checking all the resistors for tolerance, doing a filter cap job and a few other standard things (checking resistor values, cold solder joints etc).
Once powered up, I checked all of the voltages while on a dummy load and everything looked great. When I finally played through it, there was a horrible fizzy distortion and occasional intermittent squeal without playing. I checked all the tubes I was using and ended up putting all new JJ's in, same issues.
I found more cold solder joints and noticed the board was really noisy around the coupling caps coming off V2. I cleaned the underside of the board and fixed other cold solder joints, and cleaned up excess solder and flux. Once put back, the noise at the coupling caps was gone and I installed new shielded grid wires grounded on one end.
I checked the bias and noticed it was super cold. As I adjusted it while playing, it seemed to come alive but, the oscillation came back. It seems the oscillation is part of the bias supply. I changed the 100uf/100V cap to a 47uf/100V and had the same issue. I put another 47uf/100V from the wiper to ground and still no better.
When I put a signal generator on it and used my scope, the wave form looked good, no cross-over distortion or anything. When just using the scope to try and figure out the oscillation frequency, I saw about 20Khz average
I've never come across an issue like this, and can't for the life of me figure out what I am missing. I have not had a reverb tank nor tried tremolo the entire time, and those controls have been all the way down while troubleshooting.
I was determined to figure this out on my own but am up against my own limitations yet again.
Thank you in advance, this forum has helped immensely over the years.