Plate,
I have done some negative feedback switches in the past on different amps. It's a useful mod and I do like the tone of the NFB disconnected. However, it does induce more noise into the amp at idle and has more grit then smoothness to it. So, I have not done one on my last several amps AND I removed them on two other amps. On one of those amps where I removed it, I simply inserted a plastic plug to fill the hole. So, I wasn't removing the NFB to make room for anything else. I removed it because I wasn't using it.
I do like the PAB and midboost on my amps. I've put something similar on 5 different amps and found them worthwhile. Between those two, I use the midboost more. The PAB feature helps a lot with overdrive but it induces noise at idle like the NFB switch does. So, .............. IF I only had room for one mod, I'd do the midboost. The midboost is especially useful going from strat single coil type tone to a fatter humbucker type tone.
Remember, all of this is personal taste & what I like might seem less than useful or desirable to another person.
What I do like a lot is how the mid pot and bass pot are separate and each how their own ground. To my ears, this gives more tonal options as I dial those then when the bass is connected into the mid pot like on Fender amps or Marshall. AND this is a very easy rewiring to try out.
A fairly non-intrusive and easily reversible wiring approach may be to replace the cathode caps with values I suggested and simply wire your mid pot and bass pot apart and use a 10k resistor to ground on the bass pot. IF you like that, then add the mid boost feature.
Note the mid and bass capacitor values in the tone stack I use. It may be helpful to try those, but what you have already may suit you just fine?
Anyhow, these are just ideas to consider. I want your amp to sound like what you want, so I am just tossing out ideas in response to the thread comments. Not saying you "should" try this at all.

Best regards and respect, Tubenit