Well I'm glad everything seems to be solved. Definitely more than one way to go about making 30 Volts of B+ disappear.
Trainwreck in 6V6......usually 5 triodes at about 1.2mA each for the preamp and PI plus about 45mA times two tubes for a grand total of 96mA....we can call it 100mA for ease of calculation. However since this is at 400V instead of 200V,....probably 20mA/tube would be more accurate. Didn't old Fender princetons and harvard's run two 6V6's with a 70mA power transformer?? Anyway dropping 30 Volts time 100mA means shedding about 3 watts off the B+ (probably only 1.5 to 2 Watts in reality).
I suppose the 470 ohm ten watt resistor would probably do the job, but that's current dependent and a little too....uncontrolled...for me.
I would have done it by using an inexpensive MOSFET and three resistors, ( Total cost about ONE dollar.......and 7 bucks for shipping). The MOSFET I would pick is the STP2NK60Z and costs 72 cents at mouser. I bought ten so the cost was only 54 cents each. The part is total overkill (rated at 45Watts), but the price is right.
It's just a basic voltage follower (aka MOSFET common drain).
I thought about using great big zener for this type situation and then I got to looking at the prices. HOLY SH..... 20 + bucks!!!!

Anyway, for those who don't deal with FETS here's the very simplified overview, there's three pins on a FET (gate, source and drain). When used as a voltage follower whatever voltage signal is fed to the gate pin will then be followed by the source pin provided that the drain pin is at a higher voltage.
Virtually no current flows from the gate (perhaps microamps on a bad day) to the source pin or drain pin.
However my analog friends tell me that oscillation could occur unless there is a resistor on the gate to act as a stopper (otherwise I'd be done in two resistors). Also some people feel you must use zener diodes to protect the FET from overvoltage in Vgs or Vsg, but this part has the protection built in already.
So we have a voltage divider of R1 and R2 taking 30.51 Volts off a 437V signal and feeding 406V to the gate pin.
If you want to get slick you could throw a potentiometer into the R1 spot and make it variable, but then you have to figure out where to mount the pot.
For less than 3 watts I'm not sure I would bother with a heat sink for the mosfet unless you already have something lying around.
Oh, I need to make this a jpeg or gif to see it here.