The 7-pin 6AQ5 is very similar to a 6V6 but needs a lower B+. Since you have the chassis compare the wiring of the output tube to the pin-out of a 6AQ5.
Yes, looks like that may be the culprit.
So with a rectifier, I'm assuming a 6x4, the power tube, and 4 unknowns. I'm assuming a couple 6ba6/6be6, and maybe a 6c4. It also was running 2 lamps.
So say 1 amp draw for the power tube and rectifier, say another amp for the 4 remaining tubes, and another .5 amp for the bulbs. That's still only 2.5 amps.
As Sluckey pointed out, I was doing my math wrong, although I tested it with my multimeter and got 3.6 Amps in the heater string to get it to 6.3 V. Maybe just a difference in wall voltage compared to the 50's, maybe they didn't really care if they weren't bang on 6.3 volts? Maybe a combination of both? Anyways, i did cook it for a good 30 min twice, and didn't notice any real overheating of the transformer. The resistors certainly did cook, enough so that I wouldn't want to leave it unsupervised for any length of time.
As for the high voltage wiring, I used 55k resistance to reduce the voltage from 437V Dc to around 415 when it warmed up. But that over the resistance, and also tested with my multimeter only gave me .007 mA. Am I doing this wrong? Should I be loading it to 5% less than the original voltage of 320V instead?
Edit: Or should I be measuring the voltage drop across the transformer windings which read as 440 Ohms 1 side, and 404 ohms on the other. With a 21 voltish drop. The math is kind of confusing me here...