It's probably in one of the links, but here's the bottom-line reason for the solid-state diodes:
Tube rectifiers rarely fail by becoming open-circuit; instead they fail by shorting plate to filament/cathode. When the short-circuit happens, a.c. passes through to the first filter cap without being rectified. When that incoming a.c. swings negative, it destroys the (electrolytic) filter cap due to reverse polarity.
With the solid-state diodes in place, the tube can have both sections short, but the a.c. is already pre-rectified before it hits the tube rectifier. If you're onstage, the amp will still play but you might notice the loss of sag.
Maybe I try it someday, although there is this school of thought that tube amp sounds best just before it blows up. So making amp immortal might prevent one from hearing the sweet sound of dying amplifier.

If the tube rectifier shorts plate-to-filament/cathode, you get that negative voltage input to the filter caps. Reverse polarity voltage on an electrolytic cap causes the oxide-layer dielectric to evaporate instantly, turning your filter cap into a short-circuit to ground. The cap will explode (due to gas build up) and your line fuse will pop due to excessive current draw with B+ shorted to ground. Hopefully, your PT doesn't get burned up. And now you have no sound, and the magic smoke escapes...
