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I missed the....I stared at it a while before I felt sure. Not the neatest drawing, and has been through a bad Xeroxing.
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but choke does supply the whole amp.Yes. As you say, that affects dynamics (and weight!). Probably drops a few Volts too.
But replacing the offending PT with another of ample current and very-near Voltage "should" work.
The 325V rating on 022798 is significantly lower than the 360V on the Gibson plan.
Yet I once got a "Bassman PT" from another place (Weber), used the lower-volt taps, got 395V from a 108V wall-voltage. So I *thought* that proper wall voltage and the higher-V taps would get into the zone.
IMHO, it would be wiser to go low. The Gibson isn't getting any younger. And 50W tube-amps are readily available new, 100+W tranny-amps are very cheap. I'd rather see it cruising 10% down from gut-ripping power than have it roaring 100% and burning up. (I actually used the Weber to down-rate a burnt-PT Ampeg; better 20W-30W with student-proof reliability than another 60W $120 flame-out.)
https://taweber.powweb.com/store/magnetic.htmW022798 125P5D 125P7D US voltages Power Transformer for Tweed Bandmaster, Tweed Bassman,....
https://taweber.powweb.com/store/022798sch.jpg720VCT, which is your 360VAC each side. Plenty of 6V power, a 5V to ignore, and a 45V (not 50V) tap for bias. (Reduce R61 to 1K; increase R59 as needed to get ~~50V bias and trim for happy idle current.)
Check Hoffman's specs for similar parts: you sure will get it faster.