I had a 100k pot in series with the 10k resistor on the solid state power supply right after the 680r resistor
This is somewhat of a clue: In general terms, when a part or a voltage level is ten times another one and we mush them together; we usually think of the thing that is ten times (or...in the case of current draw....1/10th as large) that of another part as "swamping" the other one. What you have here is 100K : 10K : [less than] 1K. These are all 10:1 relationships. They are out of scale with each other. The item that is going to dominate the action of your voltage divider is the 100K pot (assuming, perhaps incorrectly, that it is near full-rotation and full resistance.) The 680 ohm is in effect a mere rounding error from the standpoint of the 100K pot. And a pretty small one at that, less than 1%! You could pay big money for a 100K ohm 1% resistor and measure it and find it to be 100,680 ohms or 99,320 ohms (or even looser) and have no cause for complaint! Thus, left over for the 680 ohm resistor to "deal with" after the 100K is done with whatever volts you throw at them is less than 1% of what is feeding the 100K!
So, on the pulled-out-of-the-blue assumption that your PT is 375-0-375 and the reading on a Solarus schematic that the tremolo uses 24 mils (.024 amp) Because we can see, on the the filter for the SS section two voltage readings, 22.5 volts, a 330 ohm resistor, then 16.5 volts. So 330 ohms drops 8 volts. 8 / 330 = .024.
We would expect to see .7 times 375 volts or 262 volts on the output of the rectifier diode. We want to get that 262 down to 22.5 volts, we need a resistor that is (262-22.5) / .024 = 9979 ohms. So you want about 10K as a dropping resistor--whether it's a single resistor or a pot and a fixed R--something in that range. This is why your 100K pot leaves you with next to nothing. It's eating too many volts. Those resistors or the R/pot combo have to be of decent size, too...because power-wise, you are talking about (.024) * (.024) * 10K = 5.76 watts.