With the understanding that for the most part, the effort doesn't achieve much, yes, I think lots of folks would be interested. Hopefully you could just supply and perhaps enhance whatever design effort you did to get your results. To rebuild it from scratch...I wouldn't ask you to do that.
I attempted a "paper" design for a regulated 6.3 VDC @ 3A filament supply, using a 6.3 VAC transformer.
Using a bridge rectifier made with 1N5822 Schottky diodes (40V/3A), we lose about 1V in the 2 diode drops
Using an LT1764 regulator, the dropout voltage is less than 0.4V @ 3A
So 6.3 VAC * 1.4 - 1 - 0.4 = 7.42 VDC (ideal unfiltered)
In reality, we get crushed by 5 more factors: ripple voltage, ripple current, ESR of the capacitors, transformer winding resistance, and low line voltage.
62,500 uF of filter capacitance gives about 0.4 V p-p of ripple, and 4A rms ripple current.
C (farads) = load current / (freq * ripple_c_pp) = 3A / (120 Hz * 0.4) = 0.0625 farad
To minimize ESR and to divide the ripple current, this can probably best be done with 10 x 6200 uF ecaps
Oops, our diodes don't have enough continuous current capacity, so we'll have to parallel them, or use ones rated for a higher continuous current
In order to minimize the transformer secondary winding resistance loss and have enough current to charge the reservoir capacitance, the transformer AC filament current rating needs to be 2X or more the desired DC 3A output.
Since it takes a boatload of capacitance and current to get a low enough ripple to stay in regulation (that's not even considering low line voltage), the PSU is going to cost a bit. We can build an entire amp for what some of these directly heated triode hifi guys (300B's, 2A3's, etc) spend on their current regulated DC filament supplies.
So my regulated 12V supply design with twice the voltage and 1/4 the current was a piece of cake compared to this.
I still think it's possible (unless we want to have margin for low line voltage), but not very economical.
If I wanted 6.3 VDC regulated at 3A, I'd use a separate filament transformer with enough voltage margin to allow more ripple and line voltage variation.
Thanks for encouraging me to work out the details. This is good stuff to think about.[/s]