... Should i pull this copper pipe and put in the brass plate? ...
No, what you have is fine.
... D-Lab swears by the brass plate (.3mm x 3 inch ). What is my advantage here?
I disagree with some of his assertions & methods (then again, perhaps few of us in this hobby agree).
Fender's brass grounding strip is merely a tool to assist assembly in a production environment. Even Fender doesn't do it today.
When Fender was building those amps, they soldered to the chassis to connect to ground.
Soldering to the chassis requires a
150+ watt iron to work effectively. That's because the chassis is a giant heatsink that will prevent a smaller iron from getting the spot hot enough to melt solder.
So the folks at Fender ran a wire from a Ground Eyelet to the brass strip
before it got mounted in the chassis, so the joint could be soldered with the regular iron used for all the other eyelets & solder joints.
When the board & brass plate were installed in the chassis, the board got its needed chassis-grounds without any need to use a huge iron.
The huge iron was then only needed when the power transformer was mounted, and a few wires were soldered to the chassis (or the Princeton's can-capacitor got tabs soldered to the chassis).
Over time, the brass strip causes problems. Corrosion forms between it and the chassis, resulting in noise issues.
Many folks I know service a vintage Fender amp by first removing the knobs, pots and brass strip. They then clean the chassis & brass by sanding with emery cloth, then cleaning up with mineral spirits or alcohol. Everything is reinstalled once all surfaces are shiny & clean.