> I feel I should get clear about the reason why the start popping now after all these hours of working..
You need 1,668V rating. That's the rule for the 2-diode CT capacitor power supply. On the first half-cycle the winding swings up to 834V peak, on the next half-cycle it swings 834V the other way while still hanging on the cap's 834V... 1,668V across the diode. (If I am repeating Sluckey, it's cuz the point bears repeating.)
The "1,000V" diodes are not sure to break-over at 1,001V. Long ago I tested a bag of "60V" diodes. Some were soft at 80V and most were really 97-115V breakdown.
A 1N4007 is sure to be good for at least 1,000V. It may be good for more; maybe 1,800V or maybe 1,100V.
We got the 1,668V number from nominal PT voltage. Power lines have spikes. Very short spikes may not be instant death. They may sustain micro-damage. If this happens many times, the diode is weakened enough that it may fail "for no reason", but really worn-out by repeated stress.
It is good policy to pick diodes for TWICE the calculated voltage. So you want 3,400V rating. This is difficult.
There's also current. A six-pack KT88 is liable to pull 0.8A of DC at full roar. That's 0.4A per diode which seems OK. But the peak currents in cap-input rectifiers flow in narrow spikes of very high current. As a rough rule of thumb you should double or triple the current rating of the _PT_. This suggests 2A or more.
It was VERY common in the early years of Silicon rectifiers for rectifiers to blow after many dozen starts or some hundreds of hours. I made a mini-career of fixing gear, and got tired of exact-replacements failing over and over.
Oh, and Sluckey sure is right. Once one diode goes, they all go. Domino effect.
> Series a couple of Doug's 3 Amp 1000V diodes
That's perhaps a bare minimum to be pretty-sure it won't come back dead in another 100 starts or 1000 hours. I would really seek a 3,000V rating.
> use an already done diode bridge
As you say, the FWB needs a different connection using half the winding, which is lossy and wasteful. Probably fine for smaller amps. Six-KT88 is a very heavy load. And 1,668V is well beyond common FWB ratings.
> they do not "make" 1000 volt diodes
Well, they try for over-1000V but historically they get a lot of "rejects" which have to be sold as 100V or 400V parts. The old sort was with a very low-current near-breakdown, non-destructive. Maybe now they know their stuff so well they can by tests far below the knee.