this is the Rev. B, green PCB, and has different labels & voltage references than the later models. see attached schematic. i've also attached the loadline & bias point my amp is currently running at, plotted on mutual characteristics.
like many, i'd like to cool these power tubes down a bit so they last maybe more than maybe 8 mo of heavy use 😅 ideally into the 80% or lower plate dissipation range, so long as it sounds right. but to drop it down that far on the loadline by just lowering the grid voltage, would substantially limit the amount of input headroom i have before hitting some IMD in cutoff. i DO think this amp sounds great this close to a center bias, it's just too damn hot overall! i give JJ's credit for putting up with 100-100% plate dissipation for this long...
so, my thought is, instead of changing the grid bias, why not drop the B+ only to the power tubes (somehow)? sliiiiiiide the whole loadline to the left 30-50 V, maybe drop the screen voltage a tad to keep it hitting the same place on the knee... all the amp's most expensive parts are a bit happier, and i just gained some sorely needed compression headroom on the OT!
worth noting all preamp DC voltages are stellar, which is why i'd like to isolate this drop to only the power tubes' supply.
so my question is... can i more or less drop a choke of appropriate current handling capabilities and DCR directly into the B+ path, between the input filter & the OT center tap?
or, would it be wiser to install it directly after the bridge rectifier, possibly with another filter cap preceding it, and then lower the resistance of the first dropping resistor before the preamp appropriately to compensate, so that the EL84 plates and screens are dropped but the preamp runs at relatively the same voltages?
interested in practicality, expense, and effects on tone/response. my thanks in advance!