My EE friend got back to me with the suggestion to change the values of two compenents at the reverb return op amp - C37 changes from 330pF to 100 pF, and R52 changes from 100k to 330k. He also told me that in general decreasing the value of C37 will increase the hi frequency gain, and increasing the value of C35 will increase bass frequency gain. To my ears, adding bass to the reverb would make it muddy so I left that alone. I tried different values for C37, down to 22pF, but 100pF was the nicest balance of drip without harshness. There's some ultra high frequency oscillation when the reverb is maxxed, especially when the tremolo is on for some reason, but backing off on the reverb level and a bit of top end cut and it goes away.
Another fun thing I discovered - being a big fan of reverb, I've developed an external mix level adjustment for the Fender 6G15 circuit and vintage Fender -Reverb combos which I call the "Surfy Drip", and, since the Vox pan has the same output impedance as the Fender pan, the pedal works with the Vox, too. This will make more sense when you watch the video.
video here:
https://youtu.be/qwX6ccQjxOMhere are C37 and R52 on the circuit board:

here is how the surfy drip is connected to the reverb circuit. I put the jack for the pedal through one of the plastic grilles so no drilling of metal or wood.

here you can see the RCA splitter where the surfy drip jack attaches at the reverb return. Also, note the full length reverb pan (4EB2C1B) fits just fine inside the head.
