Were they the Dumble of their time keeping the specifics of the circuits secret?
Sorta. If you forget the hype surrounding Dumble amps, the key fact that makes them of value to some pros is that he'll custom build an amp to your exact desires, and fine tune the voicing of the amp to suit that particular player.
Standel initially made amps for pro musicians in the early 50's. He had a couple of standard models, but each was voiced and/or altered to suit the individual buyer. According to the
"Butcher Paper List" there are about 66 amps made during this period.
Standel eventually grew to having standard models and larger production, and those amps from the 60's are somewhat less collectible. The ones from the 50's are exceedingly hard to come by, because so few were made, and diehard Chet Atkins, Merle Travis, Joe Maphis, and 50's steel fans see them as the holy grail.
Anyway, the amp I have documentation for is from Feb '54. According to my info, the phase inverter is split-load, the output tubes are not run ultralinear, the input stage is not parallel triodes, the tone circuit is incorporated differently (and has only Treble/Bass), and there are additional parts in the Weber re-think that simply aren't in the original.
I think Weber looked at a stock Standel and chose to do some things better/differently than the original. I don't have a problem with that. Some folks want a recreation exact down to the style of screws... they
would have a problem with the changes, even if performance is unaffected.
Further complicating wide knowledge of these models is that there is a new company that now owns the name, and produces amps that are similar to the original, as well as some that are advancements. My source for info required a non-disclosure/non-production agreement from me, to avoid potential lawsuit for sharing what could be viewed as proprietary information. Building an amp for myself is not considered competing with the company; if I released a line of clones, clone circuit boards, etc, then my source felt he might be legally impacted.