May as well share this with others. If I am wrong on this, please respond with some corrections or comments. I do not want to misguide anyone having the similar issue.
I was able to get the Mark V90 chassis out. I did not realize I already mapped out the strobe mute circuit as the ribbon cable was marked with a black stripe. Here is a different view. At the top of the image below is the strobe mute marked with black and highlighted in yellow. It is the 5th wire from the right side of the ribbon cable. (4th wire from the left). This wire connects to the collector of the 2N6426 NPN Darlington Transistor.
Here is a closer look at the strobe mute circuit. The diodes in this image may be part of the trigger circuit connected to the base. None of those components are connected to the collector. the resistors above the transistor are part of the trigger circuit tied to the base. The tantalum cap or yellow bullet cap may be one of the timing caps. I did not probe it to see if it was connected to the collector.
I traced the strobe signal line from the 5th post on the pin header to a resistor close to the V7 mute circuit. That was a bit difficult as the J175 was pushed down so close to the PCB it was hard to get the test leads in there. The gate has a 330k resistor as marked. The strobe connects to the other side. The black blob next to the plastic board support between V6 and V7 is the J175M1 transistor. You probably found this part already.
The other mute for the signal path that is in front of the GEQ is actually tucked right next to the row of inductors. It is easy to find with the array of Zener diodes. J175M4 is sort of hidden by some wires. I could not find the gate feed circuit. I only focused on the V7 mute (phase inverter mute). Note that the front of the amp will be at the top of the image.
I also found a diode where the cathode was connected to the strobe mute bus. I could not find where the anode was connected too.
The strobe mute should at least have +12V dc on it most of the time. As for the actual voltage on the gates of each of the J175 FETs I did not measure. The only time the two JFETS will be shorting out the signal is when a change occurs on the channel. the signal will get pulled low and remain low for a timing period based on an RC time constant. I could not locate the pull up resistor on the collector of the strobe transistor. Just for S&G's if you want to find the chip used to decipher the voltage from the footswitch, it is located under the ribbon cable that connects to the two rotary switches on the back panel. it is on the same board as the Strobe mute circuit. Good luck if you needed to remove it. This layout is a mess, Almost like the RA100 as things are not where you would expect them to be located.
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So if you are looking at voltages while the amp is powered up, measure the G side of the 330k resistor above in reference to ground. You should have a voltage above the pinch off voltage of 3V to 6Vdc. It may be higher than that as the resistor is probably just a current limit. On the strobe mute side it may be closer to the +12V. Sorry if I did not take this any farther. Not doing so well at the moment.