IMO If someone is installing a tube rectifier to avoid installing a standby switch, its dollar foolish, and penny wise.
My preference, is tube rectification, carbon resistors, standby switches, chokes, and tolex with SS protection for no other reason, (and its not a good one), those slide rule designers didn't have decent SS components, and why risk $$$ because of a component failure.
And while I am expressing my opinion, I would prefer to use a choke rather than a resistor for my voltage dropping. (I made an adapter for the three point hitch on my tractor so I can lug the amps around.
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I'm mostly of the same opinion as yours.
If you are using a tube rectifier, and especially a gradual warm up rectifier, I prefer not to use a standby switch.
I will use them with a SS rectifier, if I have the space for the switch.
If there is no space for the switch, I wouldn't sweat not having one.
I'm not convinced they are needed, or that leaving your amp on Standby for too long won't damage your tubes.
If I want to silence the amp, it seems easier to me to just turn the volume on my guitar to 0 instead of walking to the amp and flipping a switch.
Adding protective diodes to your tube rectifier seems like a no brainer to me.
Now if your tube rectifier fails short, you don't blow up your amp.
A couple of diodes only costs pennies.
A new PT could be $100 or more. Always add those diodes, IMO.
Chokes are something I also prefer using.
They are heavy, and much more expensive than a resistor, but still worth it to me.
Their filtering and storage of some electrical energy cannot be replicated exactly by an RC filter.
They definitely have an effect on the PS, which effects the sound, when you push your amp hard.
