Unfortunately, I'm at my wits end with this problem and I have to ask someone to please kindly help me out.
Here's the overly long story: I built the Crack stock first, and used it with no problems for two weeks (was really surprised and impressed with how it sounded!). I then installed the Speedball, which worked fine for a few days aside from a hum in the right channel only when RCAs were plugged in. Decided to take a look into the hum issue, see that the sleeve of the black wire from 3U to the headphone jack was frayed a little, so I replaced it with a new length of wire. Powered up fine, but the hum was still there, only a bit quieter. Went back again and resoldered some connections that looked iffy. Found the UF4007 going from 18L to 21L was loose, so I resoldered that. Powered on, and nothing. No voltage readings whatsoever. See the fuse is blown (the little wire inside was broken, I've never worked with these fuses before). Change the fuse, notice the leads of the rectifier I resoldered were touching the other UF4007 going from 18L to 20L, so I bent them back apart. Power on, fuse blown instantly.
After checking some resistances, I've noticed that I'm getting very high resistance at B3 and B6, as opposed to 2.9k ohm, and terminal 3 now has very low resistance. I don't know if that's from the Speedball or something I did. Most every other terminal, including the Speedball boards, read as they should.
I should add I'm very new to this. The Crack is the first thing I've done...ever. I've never soldered, never worked with electrical bits, never even sanded and stained wood before. I had no idea how to use a multimeter, and frankly still don't. So it's been a learning experience to say the least. And unfortunately, this problem is beyond my extremely limited capabilities. I've attached a picture, as well as some closeups of 3U. Can anyone please offer some advice? Thank you!