Firstly I would measure every voltage everywhere and mark up on schematic. Then look for anomalies.
I would call the missing -1470 volts an anomaly.
And with all secondary voltages of T1501 missing, everything that depends on them will be anomalous, too. There's not much going
into the HV generator. And what is there looks sound to me. With the HV missing, the regulator's throttle is open full.
Now comes the part where I really shine: making stupid decisions, being too lazy.
So I decided to isolate the HV generator completely by ripping out the transformer. It looked reasonably accessible after removing the fan motor. Off we go!
I try my desoldering station, solder sucker, solder wick. Everything. That damn thing just won't budge! About half an hour later I have it out, leaving an ugly mess behind. Not sure I'll ever be able to put it back in ...
So, at long last, it sits on my desk, looking rather innocent. Now I am able to check the oscillator in isolation. The few components are hooked up quickly. PSU supplies +22 volts and variable bias voltage.
At less than 3 volts bias it starts to run, and at around 5 volts the heater voltage gets close to 6.3 volts.
Voltage at collector of Q1486:
Frequency is a tad low (manual says 'about 50 kHz'), but I don't worry about 12 % in such a circuit.
I settle for a bit less than nominal voltages (5.4 volts heater, 11-10). With that I have 313 volts at 1-2.
The 'real' high voltages, however, I cannot measure with any confidence. Touching pin 8 of the transformer with a probe (connected to nothing!) capacitively loads the oscillator such that the ac voltage at the collector is roughly halved (and generates a faint 'bzzt' sound just before touching).
The best I get are 1.48 kV between 7 and 9, and 1.53 kV between 9 and 8. Between 7 and 8 there's also about 1.5 kV. These must obviously taken with a whole bucket of salt ...
Tektronix used more than 3 different 2N3055s and graded some of them. If you use the wrong one, then the high voltage oscillator may either not start or suffer from spurious oscillation.
The 151-0140-00 is the 0.3MHz low hfe variation. The closest modern part is the 2N3772G.
My Siemens 2N3055 seems to work all right. If they use a selected component in the high precision circuitry of a HP 3458A I'm all with them, but depending on it in a simple dc/dc converter doesn't get my blessings.
Checking the low voltages at the error amplifier is usually enough to tell what the inverter is trying to do and what the condition of the high voltage side is.
Sure. It tells me there is no high voltage. I still don't know
why, however. I don't know how much my body's capacitive load was (and probe to fingers), but did it amount to more than, say 20 µA, of beam current?
Remember I isolated pins 8 and 9 already while it was still built in, and it looked totally overloaded. So I took a closer look at CR1512, C1512, CR1514 and C1514, but they all appear to be perfectly healthy. Judging from my external hookup, I'd say the transformer is also good, but with much less confidence.
I might have to partially marry it to the scope again.