mat wrote:Bob-I wrote:Sounds good, nice and smooth. Too bad about the hum. Sounds like a grounding issue to me.
Thanks Bob-I. I have tried to figure out what is it with the noise problem.
I have checked the groundings and they seem fine to me at least (that is not saying there can't be a problem).
First took out PI-tube. Noise went away.
Then took away OD tube. Again noise went away.
Took out CL tube. Noise went away.
 
This would appear to indicate that the noise is in the CL stages. 
Then I did put a .01/600V cap on a stick with other end grounded and touched CL1 pin 2 - slight improvement.
CL2 pin 7 - the noise went away almost complitely.
OD1 pin2 - no noise at all.
OD2 pin7 - no noise at all.
When the noise went away the signal also went away. I could only hear very faint guitar sound when strumming.
I'm not sure what you're getting at with this testing. 
I took of the local FBL but no improvement.
Could it be my power tubes ? I have seperate biaspots and the other tube wont go hotter than -50mV(A), the other goes to -40mV(A) on identical pot/resistor.
Not likely since the noise goes away without the PI tube. 
I also measured the AC voltage across the 100ohms on the heater taps. They were different.
Maybe, but again not likely. 
Guitars volume makes the noise worse but it is still there eaven the guitar unplugged. Pre volume makes the noise slightly worse. Master volume makes the noise worse big time. Also drive pot makes it really bad.
Any help much appreciated.
More evidence that the CL tube is the problem. 
Before you continue to drive yourself crazy try...
1) A new tube in V1
2) If you used stranded wire for the heaters, look carefully under magnification for any strands that are loose. I've seen 2 cases of heater strands touching other pins injecting noise. 
3) If 1 and 2 don't work you might want to listen to each stage on it's own to narrow it down. 
I built a test connector for this. Using a female 1/4" jack I soldered in an aligator clip to the ground, then a .1uF cap to the hot and an aligator clip to the other side of the cap. 
Power up the amp and connect the 1/4" to another amp, I use my stereo. Ground the ground wire to the chassis, then use the aligator clip to the cap to listen to the various stages. Start by connecting right to the input jack, listen for the hum, Connect to the plate of V1a (this is why you need the cap, to block DC) and listen. 
Once you find which stage is making the hum, you can troubleshoot. Look for faulty components, cold solder joints, poor grounding schemes etc. I've found a lot of problems using this method. 
Good luck.