The house-call is one option.
I was thinking along the same lines as Bill. I have usually used a pull-up resistor when modulating one 555 with another. Also, note that his discharge resistor (Rb in the datasheet) is 1K and the charge resistor is up to 470K + 2*1K. That would give a very high duty cycle (T\(_{high}\)= 0.693(Ra+Rb)*C; T\(_{low}\)=0.693Rb*C), which would explain why his voltage measured at pin 3 with a multimeter is effectively the source voltage. A warm transistor would be consistent with that.
John
I was thinking along the same lines as Bill. I have usually used a pull-up resistor when modulating one 555 with another. Also, note that his discharge resistor (Rb in the datasheet) is 1K and the charge resistor is up to 470K + 2*1K. That would give a very high duty cycle (T\(_{high}\)= 0.693(Ra+Rb)*C; T\(_{low}\)=0.693Rb*C), which would explain why his voltage measured at pin 3 with a multimeter is effectively the source voltage. A warm transistor would be consistent with that.
John