Oh yeah...and get this!!!
Since this pissed me off pretty good today I wired up one of those FWB assy on my bench just to see it work and this was the result,,,, with the PT CT grounded and both legs of 340 vac tied to the AC tabs, no connection to the DC negative tab, I was reading 655 VDC from the positive terminal on the FWB to the PT CT
Something's not right. We'd need a picture of your test setup to figure out what's going on.
I say that because "you can't get there from here" if you truly have what you're telling us. Therefore, I believe you have an error somewhere, but just aren't seeing it.
If you truly have the rectifier hooked up as your diagram shows, with a true 340-0-340v transformer, you could only have a peak output voltage of 340v*1.414 = 480v.
If you have no filter cap, you
do not have a steady d.c., no matter what your meter says. Instead, you have an output pulsating from 0v to the full peak voltage of 480v, and your meter is averaging it to make sense of it.
If you're getting 600v+, that's impossible with a full-wave rectifier and 340-0-340v of input, which is what your diagram shows. So either your PT voltage has to be much greater, or you have to be operating the rectifier as a bridge.
But a bridge with 340-0-340v input really sees a total 680v input, and would output a peak of 680v*1.414 = 961v! Your meter might get confused by this pulsing from 0v to 961v, and might average it. Average voltage of an a.c. sine wave is ~0.637 * peak, or 612v in your case. RMS would be 0.7071 * peak, or 680v. Somewhere in-between gives the ~650v reading you're getting.
If you hooked a filter cap to the output of the rectifier, and *if* you have a 340-0-340v wired with a bridge, the diodes biased off would see 961v at the filter cap and another 961v peak from the transformer, totaling 1922v. The bridge will pop instantly and violently, since it's only rated for 1kV reverse-voltage.
Geezer, I think, has used these bridge packages in amps, set up for normal full-wave operation and with center-tapped PT secondaries (same as what you've been asking about). It worked out well for him, so there's no magic to it. I respectfully suggest that has to be an error that you're just not seeing yet.