This transmitter mixes three internal frequencies together to produce the channel frequency. If any one of the three shuts down, no output.
The starting point for me is to tune in each crystal oscillator with a shortwave/ham receiver. Each one has one or more tuned circuit downstream from that crystal. Peak each one for a peak on the receiver's S-meter. If any of them won't peak, it points to the circuit with a fault.
Once all three crystals are present and accounted for, the mixer circuits are next. The 5.0485 MHz AM offset crystal gets mixed with the 16 MHz channel crystals. The sum of those two frequencies on channel 1 AM is 21.3185 MHz. The only one I have memorized. Once you have that, the 21 MHz gets mixed with the 5.6465 carrier crystal for AM, both feeding into the 6CB6 tube V3. This is where you first get the 27 MHz sum of those two frequencies. T4 and T5 get peaked next. By now you should have a wattmeter reading to show the peak.
Thanks for the help. Just to clarify, I have full output on AM, and on sideband I have full carrier with no modulation when I key up (in fact when I key up on LSB or USB the carrier is about a watt or so more). However, it is always transmitting around 27mhz and the frequency and output doesn't change no matter what channel crystal is selected. You probably already understand all this, I just want to make sure I'm making sense when I describe the problem.
As far as tuning in the transformer cans, here are some stupid questions:
1. Are the oscillator and mixer circuits always running even when not keyed up as long as the power is on?
2. If so, does that mean for T1, a 5mhz IF transformer connected to output of V1 when in SSB, but bypassed in AM, I would:
A. Switch to LSB (5.648mhz crystal) and then tune in either on a receiver or spectrum analyzer (I have a TinySA) to 5.648 and try to peak the signal by adjusting the the slugs? Does this cause a problem when the frequency changes to 5.645 in USB mode or are they close enough to not matter?
3. Then for T2, switch to AM mode and peak 5.6465? etc?
Am I on the right track? Is there a probe I should be using for an antenna near the can or will it put out enough signal where just having the receiver/TinySA close to the transmitter will be good enough?
Sorry for the novice questions, I've never had to align transformer cans before beyond just peaking for max receive on receivers or max output on transmitters. In fact I was thinking about unsoldering the connections to the cans and then feeding the input side with the right frequency with my waveform generator and peaking it that way, but that seems like a ton of work and overkill.