OK, for some dyslexic reason (seeing the ground sign on the layout next to pins 1 and 8 ) and the fact I'm so used to grounding pin 8 on fixed bias amps , I had grounded pins 1 and 8

effectively nullifying the cathode bias!!!
that can be added to my list of stupid mistakes
So, amp sounds pretty good, however the gain channel isn't as gainy as I expected, I thought these amps were high gain from what i'd read, no where near high gain, sort of classic rock gain.
Also it's very noisy , not sure what that's about, the clean channel is fine 'If' I turn down the master volume which is the gain channel only and both channels are running at the same time so the noise from the gain channel is the issue.
I've nothing to compare this amp to but it's definitely too noisy. If I touch the chassis there is a slight drop in ground hum, but the main noise isn't ground issues I don't think. The amp has a single star ground for everything except the speaker jacks/OT.
Also my OT is open on one side as it's a laydown type I've stood up so I was wondering if that's adding to interference as there's no bell covering half of it, however I've seen lots of old tube amps with uncovered Transformers so I don't think that's a problem...other than health and safety in the 21st C.
the other thing I was worried about when I did the installing of hardware was the proximity of the half power and ss/tube recto switches to the output tubes, could this be a source of noise? my thoughts are that if the clean is OK then the whole output section is fine.
So any thoughts on the noisy gain channel and where to start looking?...and if anyone has built one of these amps ;can you elaborate on how 'gainy' the gain should be.
Thanks @Martin for the help again.
M
p.s. my voltages are all down 10-15v would it be worth be using the 230v AC tap on my transformer(I'm using the 240 at the moment) , would that push up the whole rectified voltages of the amp? or would the heaters be an issue?