No need to reinvent the wheel. There are a few easy checks you can do to make sure the monitor is powering up properly. If you're not sure if it's powering up by the sound, look at the neck, does it glow? If it does, turn up the screen control by the flyback. If you get a bright screen with retrace lines, your monitor is likely fine. If you do not see any glow in the neck, check the two fuses on the chassis with a multimeter, one of them is likely blown. The small one is the most common one to blow. If the small fuse is blown, you likely have a bad flyback transformer or a bad HOT. If the fuses test fine, the monitor is probably going in to high voltage shutdown. To test your B+ voltage, put your meter on the 200v DC scale, clip the ground to the metal frame of the chassis and test the voltage at the two terminals of the big ceramic resistor on the left side of the chassis frame (facing the monitor from the back). You should have 120v DC on one terminal and 145-165v (I'm going from memory here) on the other end. If both ends of the resistor have the same voltage, you either have a failed voltage regulator, or C511 has gone out of spec. Do a cap kit first and then replace the voltage regulator if the B+ voltage is still out of whack. I have repaired probably 30 of these monitors in the last year or so, they are a pleasure to work on because of he simplicity of the design, and give a nice picture when they are tuned up properly.