For what it's worth, I took the vintage Fender schematic & layout and updated them for modernized heater wiring, less random grounding, and a three prong plug (plus removing the "death cap"):
modifed 5F2-A schematic
modified 5F2-A layout
PLEASE NOTE: I am not convinced that my layout shows an ideal grounding scheme! The speaker jack is isolated, but the input jacks are not - among other things.
I originally wired the heaters as shown with the virtual center tap going to ground. Bad hum problems! Moved the center tap to pin 8 of the 6V6 and it reduced the hum a lot. This provides an elevated DC ground of about 20 volts for the heaters. You can tap off the power rail and create an elevated DC ground refence for the heaters, but this way is dead simple. (That's what Steve did.) If you do it separately, people generally take it off the screen supply node and shoot for a somewhat higher voltage somewhere between 30 & 60VDC.
Personally, I'd stick with an NOS 5Y3GT rectifier tube but others insist it makes no difference in a single-ended amp. Note: the Sovtek "5Y3" does not match vintage specs - my voltages were 20+ with the new rectifier tube vs. NOS.
Also, IMHO you don't need for a standby switch in this amp, but there are arguments on both sides of that opinion.
I have the parts on hand to modify the power supply as follows:
PT -> 22uF -> choke -> 22uF -> OT/plate supply. This should reduce the noise level appreciably.
Also, I may need to move the speaker jack ground to the ground end of the last filter cap before the preamp. This amp is still a bit noisey, but not much worse than my stock Blues Jr.
Notes on Steve's other mods:
Reducing cathode bypass cap on 1st preamp stage to 10uF should reduce bass. Not necessarily a bad idea if you have a 10" or 12" speaker.
I'm not sure why he added the 1k5 grid stopper resistor on the 6V6 and pulled the 100k going to ground before the coupling cap, but he must have a reason.
The 1k5 screen grid resistor may be a good idea. Don't know what the effects will be, but I plan on trying out a 470k resistor there (more typical Fender value).
Please let me know if you want some reference voltages. The circuit for the
Harvard 6G10 is virtually identical, but those voltages don't look Tweedie to me! I shot for voltages close to the
5F2 instead, although mine are slightly higher. Note that the choke here is probably a good idea, but the 8uF caps are WAY too small and tying the plate & screen supplies together is far from ideal.
Hope this helps. Good luck and have fun!
Chip