If that resistor was 100K and the tube triode was drawing around 1.3mA (as it should) then .0013*100,000 = 130v drop from one end of that resistor to the other...and you don't have a 130v drop, you appear to have a volt or so.
The cathode resistor should be 1500 ohms, there aren't really any other resistors that you could confuse with a 1500 ohm, as there aren't any 15K or 150K resistors in the kit (or at least there shouldn't be). IF the cathode resistor really is 1.5K (you can check this with an ohmmeter, pull the tube & read from pin 3 to ground) then the tube is pulling 4.5mA...mutiply .0045 by 100 and you get 0.45volts. If that resistor was 1000ohms then you might see 4.5v drop from the top of the inverted V to pin 1...this is why I am thinking what I am thinking. If the 100K is right then the 1500ohm is wrong.
The cathode resistor should be 1500 ohms, there aren't really any other resistors that you could confuse with a 1500 ohm, as there aren't any 15K or 150K resistors in the kit (or at least there shouldn't be). IF the cathode resistor really is 1.5K (you can check this with an ohmmeter, pull the tube & read from pin 3 to ground) then the tube is pulling 4.5mA...mutiply .0045 by 100 and you get 0.45volts. If that resistor was 1000ohms then you might see 4.5v drop from the top of the inverted V to pin 1...this is why I am thinking what I am thinking. If the 100K is right then the 1500ohm is wrong.
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