Pull all the fuses. Put them back, one only at first. See if your receive-side current draw is there. If not, put in the next fuse and glance at the current meter. Should at least narrow down where to look. The other way is to unsolder the jumper wire feeding power to each two-transistor pc board, and seeing which one has receive-side current draw hooking them each back up one at a time.
The 10-ohm resistor from each transistor's base lead to ground is the most time-proven symptom of a blown RF transistor. A resistor that's visibly damaged points to the failed RF transistor. And lf all eight of them look good, that alone proves very little. A RF transistor can fail without releasing the "10-ohm smoke".
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The 10-ohm resistor from each transistor's base lead to ground is the most time-proven symptom of a blown RF transistor. A resistor that's visibly damaged points to the failed RF transistor. And lf all eight of them look good, that alone proves very little. A RF transistor can fail without releasing the "10-ohm smoke".
73