Nope, just Nomad Radio.
The 7.35 Volt reading for the tuning voltage tells you that the PLL is not locking onto the desired frequency at all. If the PLL was locked, turning the slug in L14 would change the tuning voltage, but not the frequency the radio hears or transmits. When you turn it, the receiving frequency changes, but the tuning voltage doesn't.
When a PLL won't lock, it usually means that one of the inputs to the PLL is missing. The PLL in this radio is one internal section of a chip with 80 pins on the front panel/display pc board. First thing I would do is to probe an o'scope to pin 1 on the monster PLL/display chip and check to see that a healthy 4.5 MHz is feeding into it. Pin 75 should have your local-oscillator, the PLL's VCO. Pretty sure this radio uses the high side, 10.695 MHz above the channel frequency. That chip is pretty reliable, and you'll play the devil replacing it if it's really bad. My bets are on one of those two frequencies missing in action, not feeding the chip.
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