I appreciate the advice. I have a copy of that schematic; however, I'm not skilled in reading it. I've done a good bit of building and modifying from wiring diagrams, but I'm still pretty ignorant of electronics (although I'm acutely aware of the dangers of amps.) My initial wiring for power is in the image below - using a European coded power cord scavenged from a defunct water pump. Although the original plug wasn't polarized, I followed the original wiring with the switch on the neutral side of the transformer. I have read that best practice places the switch on the hot side, which I gather is what you're advising. To confirm, I should take the transformer wire off the side of the fuse and the blue, neutral wire from the switch and splice them together. Then I should connect the side of the fuse to the switch at the lug that currently holds the blue wire. Correct?
Then, you also advise installing 100 ohm resisters from each lead on the lamp on the right in the photo to ground to control noise. Correct?
Meanwhile, I'll also shield the hot sides of the caps as you suggest. Even in its earlier configuration, it's a great sounding amp. Do you have a sense of the impact of the original inverted cap?