I have a power transformer from an old Hammond organ I am trying to figure what it would work best for.
The PT will work best for the number & type of tubes it supported in the original piece of equipment.
Except here, there was also a speaker field-coil in the mix, and that was used to generate fixed-bias voltages in a back-bias type circuit.
You may be hard-pressed to get a similar output stage going without adding yet another transformer to develop a small fixed-bias supply.
The
Golden Rule of Salvaging is keep the entire power-supply/phase-inverter/power-section intact (here, that also requires retaining the original field-coil speaker), and modify only the preamp as-needed to get a good guitar-oriented sound.
That's because as you strip away bits from the original circuit, you find the "cool old PT" delivers the wrong voltages, or is missing a bias-supply, or has much higher DC voltage output that you expected, etc. "Buying the right part" is usually cheaper in time & money than trying to make a salvage-part work right.
... it has loads on both the B+ line and CT. ... I see around 133mA current on the B+ side, and approximately 120mA on the CT side. ...
Look at the 5U4 rectifier: the current out the 5U4 plates is 100% equal to the current pulled through the PT center-tap. So there is "130-something mA" being delivered by the PT.
What you're not seeing is each one of the Voltage-nodes marked (+290 and -19 and +250, etc) have circuitry attached that is typically drawing some amount of current from that node. Further, probably none of the voltage-nodes are precisely the value marked on the schematic. Therefore we have to be cautious inferring much from voltage-drops we calculate from the schematic-figures.
It would help to know what-model Hammond organ this powered. But I would guess 325vac tube-rectified without a speaker field-coil will net about 400vdc to a power supply. 120mA seems like it would be right for something like a Deluxe Reverb;
however, you need to add a transformer to get a fixed-bias supply to build that amp.EDIT: See Merlin's post about adding a bias supply. --HBP