Six readings of the same 0.9 ohms is suspicious. Is there any chance you made a mistake in measuring?
You actually have H1 through H6, C1 and C2, and X1, X2, and X3. This means you have three pairs:
(H1 to H2) (H3 to H4) (H5 to H6) (about 2.3 ohms between each pair)
Then you have three pairs of X readings to make:
(X1 to X2) ( X2 to X3) (X3 to X1) (about 1.68 between each pair)
Lastly you have C1 and C2 to check (about 9.6 ohms between the two)
Also, with low resistances like this you need to subtract the meter lead resistance that you get when you touch the to probes together. Usually that's a couple tenths of an ohm.
I double checked myself and then again against my faulty one (only has one faulty leg that reads open) and it showed the same reading during each of the 6 readings (on the replacement).
I have found someone parting a 003a out and have purchased the whole AC box with the transformers, switch, breaker, etc. I will test the installed components when it arrives and make sure everything test good. I was told it was removed from a working set.
I don't get know how all the pieces work together but I have to believe that either the linear transformer or the CVT1 first went bad causing the other to go bad (because it was working fine and then all of a sudden the voltage went away)....unless one of them could have been bad for some time but still allowing the set to producing AC. From what I understand either one of these faulty parts would have caused a no output condition.
Knowing this, is there anything feeding the AC box (via the 4 connectors from the control box/generator windings) that could have caused these parts to go bad? Should I have any reservations (if the components test good in the replacement AC box), installing it and testing it out (ie is futher testing needed elsewhere)?