> The resistor between B+ and screen marked in the schematic is 10K.
OK, that makes sense. At full power, screen current rises. Large resistor causes screen voltage drop. This reduces maximum plate current and power to load.
Remember this amp was not sold on "steady" power but "pluck" power. You say "The amp is loud". I assume on guitar. Between plucks the screen voltage is fairly high. You are probably getting 12W-14W at the start of a pluck. The 10K resistor wants to sag, but the 16uFd cap holds it up for a while (0.1-0.2 seconds). The power starts to sag, but also the plucked note is decaying to lower power, so the amp sag is not important in "loud but nice" (barely clipped plucks) playing.
On steady test-tone, yes, it sags. And this may also relate to low power rating speakers of 5D3 days, which might take 15+ Watt plucks but not 10 Watts steady.
And if you wanted a 25 Watt monster, you would not be building a 5D3, one of the older and lower-power DeLuxes.
As you see, a smaller screen dropper will give more power on steady overload, such as with fuzzes and compressors. This could be a switch option. Silicon rectifiers and fixed-bias can take you to even more power. That's the way Leo was going to stay ahead of his competitors. But that was all after 5D3.