Good Morning,
That sounds like the way to go. Ill order both Boards to have on hand. 5F6A & Plexi 50w. 
Can't Hurt.
Life by the Drop.!
I can see Clearly Now.
Doyle Bramhall
Im Gonna Start the Parts List here in the next hour.
Thanks everyone for all the help on this Project!
And if for some reason this does Not Work out for me ........at least i tried.
Thanks Again,
Anthony
Hi Anthony,
There's no need to buy two boards. They are very similar circuits.
IF it were me, I would buy Doug's Plexi board and modify the circuit (component values) to land somewhere between 5F6A Bassman and 1987 Marshall. That part is easy. The areas that need work
IMO are in the power supply and bias supply.
The HR Deville schematic shows 485 volts B+ supply to the output transformer center tap.
IMO this is getting outside of the sweet spot for 6L6 tubes. I would add a dropping (sag) resistor (200 ohm, 15 watt) immediately following the bridge rectifier to get the B+ at idle down to around 460 volts. At maximum signal this would drop the B+ an additional 25 volts or so, simulating the sag effects of a tube rectifier. Additionally, I would tweak the dropping resistor values in the B+ rail to provide 385 volt DC supply to the PI and 325 volt DC supply to the preamps as reflected in the 5F6A schematic.
The cathode follower in both Marshall and Bassman circuits have DC voltage of about 180 volts. This is almost double the 100 volt DC cathode to heater rating for the 12AX7 tube. The peak AC plus DC rating is plus or minus 200 volts. I would look towards adding a DC voltage divider in the power supply to reference the heaters 90 volts above ground. This would allow the 12AX7 cathode follower triode and other 12AX7 triode sections to operate within the cathode to heater voltage ratings. The 90 volt reference is within the 200 volt heater to cathode rating for the 6L6 tube as well.
I would rebuild the negative bias supply on a new board and revise the circuit so that the negative voltage supply is not dependent upon the wiper connection. I would swap the 100K resistor and 25K potentiometer locations and reference the wiper of the 25K pot to ground. This way, if the wiper connection fails, the bias voltage goes to a more negative (colder) operating point.
Good luck with your project. It looks like a lot of fun.
Regards,
John