TL;DR - Understand what voltage-change causes in other parts of the amp; then you will see the choke DCR is small enough to be "insignificant" in most applications.
... I am going take that as: An ideal choke would have zero DC resistance, so the closer we can get to ideal, the better. ...
"Better" for what? We need to consider what impact will occur for a given resistance.
... It's the 194A, 4H @ 50mA, suggested as a DR/Vibrolux replacement. ...
As Esquirefreak points out, the
Hammond 194A choke that carries Screen + Preamp current has a DC Resistance of 167Ω. What happens when all of the rated 50mA is pulled through the choke?
167Ω x 0.05A = 8.35 volts.
We would then expect our screen voltage to drop 8v due to the choke's DCR. What impact does that 8v drop create?
The graph at the top of age 6 of the
6V6GTA data sheet shows (max) plate current for changing screen voltage. Looking at the curves "Ec2 = 250v" and "Ec2 = 150v" at about 75v on the plate, we see plate current falls 50mA for this 100v decrease of screen voltage.
50mA x 8v / 100v = 4mA of plate current reduction.
Now if our Deluxe Reverb delivered 162mA peak plate current through 1650Ω to output 21.7 watts, then reducing that to 158mA delivers: (0.158A x 0.158A x 1650Ω) / 2 = 20.6 watts. That's a barely-audible reduction of output power.
Meanwhile, our
Deluxe Reverb has series screen resistors of 470Ω, so those alone will cause almost twice as much screen voltage drop (and resulting power output compression). So the choke's DCR is less significant than the screen resistors we employ to protect the tubes.
And the small-ish filter caps will cause the supply voltage to drop when we go from idle to max-power in the Deluxe Reverb. So they will also contribute to sag, and perhaps more than either the choke or the screen resistors (mainly because those screen resistors are intentionally sized to be as small as possible, while still delivering some protective effect).