- Both pt and ot are limited to the bjr specs, if I'm gonna go with any 18 watts style amp what do I have to adjust in the circuit to make it go with the under spec trannies? Or do I just drop them in and get the 15 watts version of those amp? <---Don't worry about this. -
I have to admit that the pt's secondary is unusual to me. Could somebody explain to me why is it like that? Is it because it has solid state rec. so it simply cut out 5v tab? <---correct.
Is the 20v tab to feed the solid state rectifier, right? <---no, it feeds the power supply for the op-amp preamp which looks like it wants a +/-15 volt supply. Very typical. The 20 v winding has nothing to do with the "high voltage tube" power supply.
It seems like I have to go with solid state rectifier here. <--pretty much, unless you want to go buy a 5 volt transformer to power the filament for a 5Y3 or a GZ34. Not expensive, but the lack of a CT on the HV secondary means you are forced to go to a bridge (4-diode) rectifier anyway, so you can't use a 5Y3/GZ34 EVEN IF you buy the external fil transformer. Ergo, forget the tube rectifier.
Now you have to decide whether you will be building a fixed bias amp (where the main power supply is tapped or rectified to provide about -30 to -50 volts to the GRIDS of the 6BQ5 or 6V6 outputs, OR, if you are going to build a cathode-bias amp where the output tubes bias themselves. Fender blackface amps are typically fixed bias, a bit more complicated, but not much. Many other amps are cathode bias, self biasing, a tad simpler. There is no overwhelming consensus on which is better. I love blackface amps, but the appeal of cathode bias is the self-regulating aspect. No bias adjustment, even after tubes age or get replaced.
*IF* you decide upon fixed bias (which is a brain tweaker because the fixed bias voltage level *IS* variable, but the circuit is called what it is called) then the 20 volt winding could be fed to a voltage doubler to make your ~~-35 volt negative bias, OR, the main bridge rectifier can be tapped. Pick your circuit type and we can help you with where to go from there.
- Also the pt's secondary is fixed at 240v, most of those 18 watts are looking for ~290v more or less. What do I have to adapt here? <<---Nothing, after filtering, the bridge rectifier should produce roughly 1.4 times the secondary AC volts, thus, 240 * 1.4 = 336 unloaded. In the circuit from Doug's library, the highest B+ is 329. You are good to go exactly as you are. Forget the tube rectifier, this transformer and your intention to reuse it essentially forces you to go 4-diode bridge, end of story.