Here's my story:
Finished build; resistance and voltage both tested fine. At first, the sound had its definite positives, but they were made irrelevant by the ringing of the tubes - very fatiguing sound, bordering on headache inducing. The ringing was way worse on the left channel. Sorbothane under the stock feet helped the ringing some, and the vinyl covered lead rings helped immensely. I'm not sure if it was the lead rings or break-in, but by then (about 70 hours of play) the harshness was gone and the sound was lovely (no fatigue), with the ringing only somewhat discernible in the silences between tracks - especially really dynamic or bass-heavy music.
Then, as the unit warmed up (over the course of an hour or so, gradually decreasing in occurrence but not in volume), the unit would make tearing, popping, humming noises through the speakers, whether playing music or not. The noise would go away after the unit warmed up for a while. This happened every day for a couple of weeks. Then, one day, the left channel cut out, except for a very low-level signal (either coming only from the tweeter, or too low to discern in the woofer). 30 minutes later, the left channel went out altogether. Tapping on the top plate caused the same popping, tearing sounds, and momentarily (split second) would bring the left channel back.
Switching the 300B tubes to the other respective channel did not change things (left channel still out).
I put it aside for a few days. Tonight, the unit tested normal for resistance. It tested normal for voltage, too, except for the following: C4/D4 tested at 6.8V each (supposed to test "N/A"), C5 tested at 0V, and C6 tested at 6.8V (both supposed to test "N/A"). Resistance and voltage tests done with tubes installed.
Help me Obi-Wan Kenobi. You're my only hope.