IF: "A 230v CT would be the same as 115-0-115." THEN: A 230-0-230 would be the same as a 460v CT, right?
Yes. If you add the letters "CT" to a transformer secondary voltage, it implies the voltage is that of the entire secondary winding with a center-tap halfway. So 230-0-230v has a secondary of 230+230 = 460v CT.
Therefore, if the latter is what Franco has pictured in his first diagram with the CT grounded, why isn't it the same as the 230v situation in the second diagram? He shows 230v on each half of the transformer in diagram #1, so regardless of his dialog, are the DIAGRAMS equivalent?
Yes, the diagrams are equivalent.
The center-tapped transformer at the top uses a full-wave rectifier, wherein during any instant one rectifier diode is conducting and the other is shut off. The rectified voltage is that from the transformer's center-tap to the conducting diode, or half of the full secondary's voltage.
The transformer at the bottom uses a full-wave
bridge rectifier (although that might be harder to see with the tube/solid-state hybrid setup). At any instant, 2 of the 4 diodes present are conducting, one attached to each end of the secondary. Therefore, the full secondary's voltage gets rectified. A bridge rectifier is then more-efficient use of transformer materials as all of a secondary winding is in use at all times.
The all-secondary vs half-secondary is also why some think a bridge rectifier doubles voltage, because when they attach a bridge rectifier to their secondary which previously used a CT, they get double the voltage output they did before with a full-wave rectifier. The bridge is not a "doubler" of itself, the user just unknowingly went from using half-secondary to full-secondary voltage. Simple errors like this is why Sluckey keyed on the discrepancy between what Kagliostro drew (where outputs are the same) vs what he said (where outputs would not be the same).
my circuit requires an Hammond 369GX (225v CT @ 75mA - 6.3v @ 2.5A)
You
will have another 6.3vac winding for the tubes other than the rectifier, right? 230*1.414 = ~300vdc after rectifier losses. None of your other tubes will be happy having 200-300v from heater to cathode.
The
6X4's heater-to-cathode voltage rating is 100vdc, requiring the 6.3v for that tube be referenced to the B+.