I've never tried a single bus ground before - I've always separated preamp and power amp with their own grounds on opposite sides of the chassis. So, it looks like as long as everything is attached in the proper sequence it works well, like tubeswell was showing me.
Galactic ground refers to separate star ground points chained together to form a galaxy. Keeping each star ground loop as short as within reason and eliminating chassis random grounds.
You make a star for each power supply filter cap node. What ever circuit(s) a single filter cap node feeds, you tie all the grounds from that/those circuits together with that filter caps ground lead. That forms the star. Then you run a wire to the next ground star and so forth.
You can still make the stars for the power amp and preamp and ground the 2 separately. But you don't need to, if you wire up the stars and chain them together right.
You keep the filter cap close to the circuit it powers/feeds, no dog house on the back of the chassis, no can caps with multiple filter cap nodes, because each cap can has only 1 ground, all the caps in the can share the same ground. That lets the current flow round and round in a short loop, without disturbing any other circuit.
Galactic grounding is also a wired ground, not a random chassis ground system. Random grounding has return/ground current flowing through the chassis. Your using the chassis as a wire. Those grounds can cross each other randomly in the chassis, causing problems. You want to get rid of as many chassis grounds as possible.
The noisiest ground is the 1st filter cap ground because it has the most ripple and most current. That's the most important ground to wire up right. PT CT wire directly to that 1st filter caps ground lead, nothing else. Then run a wire to the rest of the power tube grounds, including the OT ground wire.
Merlin goes through all this in that link I gave you.