As I step down to Q2 and P2 using a x10 probe. The following pictures
Er.... please allow me to give you some advice on your oscilloscope usage.
1. You can make very clear screenshots by using the scope's ability to save the screen as a PNG (or jpg or bmp) file to your external thumbdrive in the USB slot. There is no need to photograph the screen on this scope. Just put the thumb drive in the front USB hole, wait for the scope to find it, then press the "print" button below the Help button.
2. There is no need in this case for the confusing Fine Adjustment (Vernier) mode of the channel's vertical scale. Just stay with the Coarse mode on the channel's vertical scaling (V/division). Enter and exit the Vernier mode by pressing on the big Vertical Scale knob like a button.
3. Make sure that your signal isn't going off the screen vertically (clipping) as it is in two of your shots. Use the correct baseline vertical position and correct vertical scaling so that your entire vertical waveform is actually on the screen. It also helps if you put the baseline exactly on one of the graticule lines (helps with visual crosschecking of voltage values.)
4. Make sure that you are using the 10x setting on the probe _and_ on the Channel settings menu. These settings must match. From your statements we really don't know if they are matching or not. 99 percent of the time you will want to use the 10x settings on probe and channel; it is rare to need to use 1x in general scope use.
5. Just saying you are measuring "Q2" isn't enough information. Are we looking at Q2 base, collector or emitter? And what do you mean by "P2" ?
6. The Horizontal settings (timebase, memory depth) should be set so that you have a trace all the way across the screen instead of the horizontally "chopped" view you show in one of your shots.
All of that being said, the last scopeshot does show some useful information. It at least shows that your board appears to be producing the oscillations at low voltage which should be being boosted to "shockable" voltage by the output section of the board -- so it is likely that the COB (chip-on-board) under the black blob is working properly. I would suspect things like broken wires, and/or bad solder joints in the output section.