Would 47K be best on the NFB divider if I have a multitap OT ? I plan- to (at least initially) use my JBL D130 so it's 8 ohms
It's 47 ohms, not 47K. Fender used 47Ω whenever the NFB was connected to an 8Ω speaker tap. 100Ω was used if NFB is connected to a 2Ω or 4Ω speaker tap.
I thought the schematic had it going to ground? I was using the AA964 vibrolux schematic
Are you talking about the 220K resistor I mentioned? If so, yes, one end connects to ground. But the other end connects to pin 2, not pin 1, just like the AA964 schematic shows.
the aa964 has a 2200 ohm resistor on V2 and the 820 on V3A, I'll look at other circuits, maybe it's a silverface thing??
It's not a silverface thing. It's all about sharing cathode resistors. Look again at your schematic. True, there is a 820Ω resistor on the cathode of V3A. But V3A cathode is also connected to V3B cathode, so you have two cathodes sharing the same 820Ω resistor. If you want to use the 820 you should remove the 1500Ω/22µF from pin 8 and connect pins 3 and 8 together. If you don't want to share a single 820Ω cathode resistor, you should change it to 1500Ω.
A question. I have an extra dark green wire tap on my PT. It goes to a 'pedal cut' pot and produces about 27 VAC when the Pt primaries are getting 120VAC. I wonder if it could be of any use. otherwise I'll just cap it off
Not enough voltage to use as a bias tap for 6L6s, so just cap it off. This reminds me though. Since you don't have a 50VAC tap on that PT, you'll need to feed the bias circuit from the HT winding. This means you will need to change that 470Ω/3W to 100K/1W (like you would see on a Princeton Reverb).