So yesterday I'm rushing an amp build (AB763 BFDR) because the customer wants it by the afternoon.

I can't believe how much I got done in one day. I went from all separate parts and a loaded turret board to a completely assembled and wired up amp in 6 hours and was finishing right when the new owner was closing in on the shop. The solder smoke was flying and the finger tips were burning.
About 10 minutes before he arrives I start it up on the light bulb limiter and all is well. Then I plug it into a normal outlet and dial down the bias voltage until I get 430VDC 23ma. Looking good. I plug in a guitar and nada. I look thought the amp and find I've not connected the grids of the PI. Shut her down, drain the caps (not quite enought cause I'm in a hurry and I get bitten) Crank it back up and still no sound.
I hook up my signal injector and find with my tracer that I've got signal on the V1a and V2a grids but nothing on the plates. I do a voltage check and I've got 384VDC on the preamp tubes. Customer arrives. I tell him it's not ready and I have some troubleshooting to do. But, he picks up the Silvertone 1484 I have ready for him so its not a totally wasted trip. I go back into the shop and shut everything down. I tell myself, "Rushing with high voltage appliances is a bad thing." and resolve to find the problem in the morning when I'm rested and my back isn't aching from slaving over a hot amp all day.
I'm laying there in bed with the day's build going through my mind wondering what I did wrong. The wife is asleep and I have an aha moment. As I'm going through every single connection I made during the build in my mind's eye, it occurs to me that I don't remember hooking up the 4 cathode grounds from the turret board to the ground buss. That explains the high preamp voltages. No ground, no current flow and therefore no voltage drop.
So I'm now convinced that rushing anything brings shaky results. I was majorly stressed trying to meet the customer's deadline and it made me scatter brained. Also, as I get older, I probably will make similar mistakes again if I don't really start taking my time. Knowledge and experience are great but wisdom tells me to slow down. Without doing so I'm making mistakes like the ones I made as a beginner without the experience. So, the message is slow down, take your time and triple check everything. And don't let anxious players rush your work.