Thanks guys for your input. I made some cathode voltage measurements:
V1a - 2.84V (I forgot to mention earlier that I at some point in the past had done an "British Mod" on the normal channel which I since mostly removed, but I left the 2.7k/0.68uF resistor/cap, so this voltage might be expected to be fairly high given this?)
V1b - 2.05V (this seems in line with the Super Reverb schematic which shows 2.1V)
V2a - 2.25V (higher than the 2.1V found in the Super Reverb schematic)
V2b - 2.23V (higher than the 2.1V found in the Super Reverb schematic)
V3a/b - 9.12V
V4a - 2.27V
V4b - 2.18V
V5a - 2.47V
V5b - 236V
V6a/b - 105V
I am a bit puzzled by the V2a and V2b cathode voltages above, but I just had a thought. I am using 2.7k and 3.3k resistors in parallel to achieve a ~1.5k equivalent resistance when in stock mode (I have this as a switchable mod right now to go from ~1.5k to 2.7k). If the resistors are a bit off their target values (i.e. at the 5% extreme of their tolerances), perhaps that could be causing the slightly higher cathode voltage?
I noticed that the old Super Reverb AB763 schematic in the link from HotBluePlates actually has 270V at V1a, V1b, V2a and V2b. Further, it shows 410V before the 100k plate resistors, so there appears to be a 140V drop consistently across each 100k plate resistor for V1a, V1b, V2a, and V2b. My voltage measures 431V before the plate resistors, and as you can see below I am not getting the same consistent voltage drop at V1b, V2a and V2b (I am assuming that V1a is higher due to the 2.7k cathode resistor, but should the others not be equal, or is this caused by the cathode voltages being different between V1b and V2a/V2b?).
Another observation - in the Fender schematic, V1a and V2a both have independent 1.5k resistors, whereas V1b and V2b share an 820 Ohm resistor. Since 820 Ohm is about 10% more than half (750 Ohm) of 1.5k, why would Fender be getting the exact same 270V at each plate of V1a, V1b, V2a, and V2b?
To HotBluePlates' point, maybe my power tube plate voltages are reasonable at ~20V more than the original AB763 Super Reverb, and thus perhaps the 431V I am measuring before the preamp plate resistors is reasonable at ~20V higher than the 410V found in the Fender schematic. Does this then mean that my 295V V1b plate voltage is reasonable? Why would V2a and V2b be lower at 271V & 273V? Is it because of the cathode voltages being different, or does that not make sense? Shouldn't a higher cathode voltage lead to a higher plate voltage (as is the case with my V1a)?
The Hoffman AB763 as well as the original AB763 Super Reverb call for the GZ34 rectifier tube, if I am not mistaken. I am glad to hear that ~480V on the plates is not unreasonable, but I am confused as to why it would be higher now than when I originally did the build. When I was biasing it today, I did not notice a huge difference in plate voltage with a higher bias current, but I can take another look tomorrow. I will also measure AC voltage at pins 4 & 6 of the rectifier.
I suspect you are right about the Normal disconnect mod. It seems to basically allow me to do the same as if just turning up the volume knob, but I'll play around with it some more to see if there might be some subtle differences. I did find a post from Sluckey that had some info on how to do a tremolo disconnect on a Hoffman AB 763. Basically, you just cut the circuit after the 47k resistor prior to V5. It might end up having the same effect as just increasing the volume, though. I need to listen some more first. Both mods were definitely noticeable (easy to tell as I have them wired to switches), but again, it might not be any different then just turning up the volume.
Eleventeen - I did not change any resistors between power supply nodes, but I did disconnect and reconnect the filter caps as I removed the entire turret board when drilling some holes in the chassis, so I could have potentially damaged the adjoining resistors with excessive heat upon reconnecting. What would the impact of a damaged resistor be - lower resistance, perhaps?
Thanks!