The first thing is to do your voltage checks. I wouldn't be surprised it that checks out though since many meters kinda average out transient voltage irregularities if they're fast.
After that, do as Grainger suggested and plug and unplug the tubes a few times to clean the pins and sockets.
Also, after the unit has been powered down for an hour or so, go through and lightly wiggle all the wires and components to be sure that all the solder joints are holding on tight. One or two may just look good. (pay particular attention to the spots where a single wire is routed "through" one connection and ends on another like the ground on the headphone jack, both should be soldered).
Even if none seem loose, reflow the solder on all the joints.
Going into a little more detail about what the noise sounds like would be nice.
You said it was a static sound. Is it snappy, hissy, poppy sounding?
Noisy tubes have a poppy, bubbly sound to them. Sometimes this kind of noise will go away with tube burn in.
Also, you said the noise was loud. Is it loud like screaming guitars loud or more like the level of brushwork on a snare in the background?