Having repaired them, they are easier to repair then you think. Each transistor has its own fuse. If not, worse that happens is a whole string of seven pops.
They fail shorted, most times, so you find them with a Ohm meter.
If you can not find them with a Ohm meter, you hook up a lab grade current limited power supply at set at 10-20 amps limiting and find the transistor with the least voltage across it.
There are other techniques, but a good tech can fix a passbank in less then two hours, often in an hour.
That is hooked to a 3030 or 3050 ceramic based head. SP used the 270 until they could get the more modern switched resistor and SCR based power supplies working for their metal ceramic tubes.
It needed 440 to 480 volt three phase to run, resulting in 35 amps or more down the tube bore. The tube had 670V open circuit across it before the ignite pulse fires.
A 741D 14 pin ceramic version of the classic LM741 op-amp drives the passbank.
Steve