Very interesting. Here are some things that seem to be relevant:
"Valve (vacuum) rectifiers should always be allowed to charge the reservoir naturally from cold. If the valve is preheated before the reservoir is allowed to charge, the valve will have to supply the full inrush current when the switch is finally thrown. This is called hot switching and causes sudden cathode saturation that can lead to catastrophic arcing inside the tube. Hot switching of rectifier valves was usually forbidden by valve manufacturers. Opening a standby switch can also induce a ghastly flyback voltage across the transformer winding, large enough to cause arcing in a valve rectifier (a precaution against this is to add ordinary silicon diodes in series with each anode of the valve to reduce the reverse voltage across it). Yet more reasons why standby switches are bad news."
"Con: 1. Can lead to failure of the rectifier valve (if the switch is between the rectifier and reservoir capacitor);"
"If you have a valve rectifier then the standby switch must be placed after the reservoir capacitor so the cap can charge up slowly as the tube warms up.
Leaving the valves totally cut-off, while heated, encourages interface resistance. A simple way to discourage this is to add a resistor in parallel with the switch to allow a trickle current to flow at all times, while still keeping the amp more-or-less muted. A 47k 2W device is a reasonable compromise. You can also add a 100nF (or so) capacitor across the switch to reduce arcing inside it. It is hard to find (attractive) switches which are rated for high voltage use, especially DC voltage, so most people just use a suitably heavy-duty mains switch. Since the HT current is quite small (hundreds of milliamps, not amps), this does not seem to be a problem."
"When using silicon diodes we don't have to worry about hot-switching, so we can put the standby switch before the reservoir, which has certain advantages. Just as with fuses, switching a DC supply is much more stressful on a mechanical switch than switching an AC supply, because of arcing. Arcing leads to corrosion of the switch contacts and in extreme cases may even weld it shut. The switch will be subject to less arcing if is placed in the AC part of the circuit, e.g. prior to the rectifier. Here it only has to handle ripple current pulses, not continuous DC. Also, if a parallel resistor is added to allow trickle current then the diodes will enjoy a soft start as the reservoir slowly charges up through the resistor.'
So after consideration of these Valve Wizard ideas should I not ever "hot switch" between tube and diode rectifiers? Instead turn the amp off and then switch. Or is there a way, a la Vox's 47K 2W resistor, to make hot switching ok? The last quote seems to indicate that hot switching from tube to diode is ok, but not the other way around?