OK, I finally got the turret board mounted and everything permanently wired up. Upon the first power up, there was complete silence coming out of the speaker. I immediately got nervous and started checking voltages. Nothing alarming there. Turned volume, treble and bass all the way up. Still dead quiet. I started checking for grounded grids and got pops and hum there. Okay... Plugged a cord in the input and touched the tip. Plenty of loud hum. I was nervous for nothing. This amp is quiet! No hum, no hiss, no nothing. A few things I have to comment on...
1) The one tube reverb using a 12DW7 is every bit as good as the original. There is more reverb than I will ever want. I would never use more than 3-4. Turning up to 10 is definitely the surf thing, with the reverb louder than the dry signal. Now that I have seen what this 12DW7 is capable of, I will never use 2 tube reverb again. It's that good. I am pushing the 12DW7 hard, but I don't think it minds. Also, the reverb return is completely hum free, even on 10. This probably has more to do with the layout than anything else though.
2) Using the one tube reverb and Sluckey's Trem O Nator allowed me to eliminate one tube completely and easily convert the Princeton to the Deluxe. In order to do this though, I had put the tremolo oscillator and the final gain stage in the same envelope. No one knew if the oscillator would pass noise over to the gain stage or not, but I am very relieved to say that it does not. Not one bit! The oscillator is doing it's thing with 300v PP right next to the signal and nothing's crossing over.
3) I have to say that this is the best sounding Fender I have ever heard. I think a large part of that was changing all of the cathode bypass caps (including the reverb driver) to 5uF. It is more "Marshall like" than I expected it would be. With low output humbuckers, it starts to break up at 4-5 on the volume and there's no flub unless you turn the bass up past 7-8. My son works midnights and was sleeping, so there was very brief high volume testing. With the little testing I did do, I am extremely impressed. Clean tones are very similar to the Princeton, but when pushed into distortion, there is no comparison. The Princeton circuit sounded like crap compared to this (sorry Princeton lovers).
I have not tested the tremolo yet, as I'm waiting for a 50K pot to arrive. I know it will work, but I don't know how well yet. I also have to get the C & D power nodes lowered a bit so tomorrow I'll swap some dropping resistors and do some more testing. Maybe I'll take some pics to share my work...