I have two 310A 'scopes that were, if infrequently used, behaving pretty well until, quite suddenly, the one made in around 1963 (S/N 019006) had lost its -150 supply, which incapacitated it. Ultimately, it proved to be the 204 volt winding of T600 (120-118) that faltering yet was working again yesterday. Today, out of curiosity, I turned on the other, older 310A and had the same problem, which disappeared when I next turned it on. Also, once both 'scopes were operational, the three supplies were -150, 100.5, and 300.9/-151.6, 100.x, and 300.x - very much within tolerance.
(On the first 310A, I did disconnect the -150 supply from the transformer and found that the voltage on the transformer secondary had dropped from the expected 204 VAC to around 70. Resistance readings between legs were well over a meg Ohm and were over 4 meg Ohm from either leg to chassis. Later, when the transformer produced 204 VAC, I reattached the -150 supply leads and had a functioning scope again.)
Have other 310A owners had similar difficulties? I found no mention of this problem on either of the Tekscope groups. It also, at least initially, made me want to take the bell off the 'top' of the transformer to look for signs of arcing, but it would require a lot of work with the potential of only confirming a dying transformer. Still, if others have encountered this problem and fixed it with something like fish paper stuffed under that transformer bell, or 'top,' I am willing to give it a try.
Both 'scopes have been stored in a climate controlled basement with humidity never reaching more than 40%. Both 'scopes were partly to substantially rebuilt in 2019 and 2020, including the replacement of all electrolytic and film capacitors. Both were working fine just last week, too, although the younger of the two did have a noticeable hum from the transformer, but it had always had that.