Post updated....review...
In fewer yes, please continue, we just have to find where it is sucking the signal away...start at the driver once you have it going...
Thank you for changing the 180 ohm resistors - the 0.46 volts or so is enough - let's get the finals to accept signal - keep the trimmers near their lower mA settings so if the radio fires up and the finals start to work, you don't have to scramble and refix the bias before the finals blow from too much bias current...
As far as signal - once the Driver "drives it" it goes thru L38 - that weird looking oversized ferrite bead with some wires attached coiled around it - look at the schematic I sent you - the coil is a coupling coil - it has one side driven by the driver, the other side "picks up" the RF from it and thru two caps C261 and C262 - they feed into the finals...
Remember the caps on the bottom of the board? Those should be relocated - they are to be set BEHIND in the bias circuit - not on the Bases of the Final. - They go behind the Ferrite Beads (L36 and L37 with the 1 ohm resistor on it) the caps FILTER that RF from screwing up the BIAS diode which can rectify it and re-inject them back into the bases of the Finals possibly damaging them by increasing the voltage drive you DID NOT set for and burn up the parts...(Those brown circles and where the open holes are on the top component side are where these filter caps go...)
Here's another concern of mine dealing with the 103 caps mounted on the bottom - they show X on the schematic, meaning they revised it and can be removed, I wouldn't I would keep them, just RELOCATE them AWAY from the Finals - they filter RF and noise from affecting BIAS - needs to be DC to keep it stable - The caps help to do just that...filter out RF that strayed in to the bias circuit...
This is what I meant by "Behind" the Ferrite beads - the circuit only applies a DC BIAS, a simple flat voltage, to keep the transistors as close to turning on as possible, without turning them on themselves. These caps keep stray RF from doing that - from reinjecting and re-rectifying thru the bias diodes, the diodes work like little detectors and can pick up stray RF. IT can leak past the ferrite beads and add extra power you didn't adjust for - even IF from the radios own internal circuits and add a voltage you don't want in there - and possibly damaging your work.
Okay, TP2 to center leg of both finals shows continuity and relatively no resistance. The resistors, 255 and 257, I switched out to 180 Ohm resistors as per your previous instruction, but they both are showing 8 V on one side and .45 V on the other. The rest of the resistors in that area seem to be fine.
Am I wrong in thinking I could make some headway if I follow the signal path from the driver to the finals and test for signal? I'm not sure which path the signal takes from the driver to the finals. It seems that since I do get a signal from the driver, however bad it is, it should conduct until wherever the problem is, and I should be able to follow it, if I knew the path. It might be that it is being pulled down somewhere, or it could be an open circuit, but either way, that is what I am thinking about.
Don't you just love autocorrect!
LOL all those typos are not typos - but it thinking what I should write - not what I wrote!