1. This is the closest schematic I can find anywhere but my amp is different in that it uses a 5AS4 (5U4GB equiv) rectifier and all the schematics show diodes and an OA2 voltage regulator?
Welcome to vintage Gibson amps. They'll produce amps with 1 model name but 8 different circuits, and only issue a schematic for one of the circuits (and that one poorly drawn). This is just what we deal with when looking at old Gibson amps.
2. The 7591 tubes appear to be grid biased but I don't see a potentiometer to adjust that bias coming off the grids anywhere?
"Historic Practice" vs "Modern
Understanding". "Understanding" is italicized because we usually breeze right past the fundamentals we need to actually understand.
If every tube with a given type number behaved exactly as the data sheet says, they would all be identical. We would not need a bias adjustment, because we would know that with a given screen voltage and a given grid bias voltage, the tube would idle at a specific operating point & plate current.
So the non-adjustable fixed-bias amps assume that all tubes are "near-enough to data sheet values" and assume the user just plugs in a new tube.
If the tubes installed are not actually "near-enough to data sheet values" then we get less clean output power. The tubes
might overheat when driven, but probably not. So we really bias to get "maximum performance" in the form of "maximum clean output power." (This is true whether forum-goers or self-style techs realize it or not)
- Early fixed-bias Fender amps did not provide a bias adjustment either.
- Later Fender amps did provide an adjustment that move both tubes' bias in the same direction. It was probably turned while monitoring power output across a load, until the installed tubes delivered their largest clean output power.
- Even later Fender amps recognized that the differences between individual tubes was probably a bigger issue, and provided an adjustment that moved the tubes' bias in opposite directions (the "Bias Balance" system). Again, it was likely adjusted while the tech monitored the clean output power across a load, and set for max clean power (which would like be at/near equal idle current).
3. The reverb is weird in that it's like a separate signal that gets added on top of the dry signal. Sounds ok low but gets out of control pretty quickly.
Fender put their Reverb control at the end of the Reverb Circuit, to control how much reverb is added to the Dry signal.
Gibson put their Reverb control at the beginning of the Reverb Circuit. This is like having Fender's Reverb control full-up, then adjusting how hard the Reverb Circuit is driven by the Dry signal. As you note, this can get out of hand easily.
Separately, Fender fed their reverb circuit from the signal coming out of their Volume control. Turn the Volume lower, and drive into the reverb circuit was reduced.
- Gibson does not do this; the feed to the Reverb pot comes from before the Loudness control.
- You could turn the Dry signal Loudness off, and still have reverb depending only on your setting of the Reverb pot.
4. Why is the tremolo so good and deep?
"Deep" because it uses an LDR ("optoisolator") which tends to be On-Off in its response. The schematic symbol implies an incandescent bulb which would smoothly increase/decrease brightness (and so Amp Volume). However, most LDRs seem to use neon bulbs which fire On-Off and nothing in between.
A second factor in trem depth is it is inserted in the preamp, where signals are small and easily influenced. Applying trem in power sections is harder due to signal size.
"Good" up to personal preference.