Re: Fender Bandmaster Amp (early silverface) - what are they like??
Let me correct some technical things since I work on these for a living.
As far as "over-filtering", as a general rule, I am against it altogether. It makes the amp feel stiff and solid state-ish, there is a reason vintage amps feel the way they do and part of it is because designers weren't putting mega capacitance in the first few stages to try to squeeze a few micro DB of noise floor out of them the way many seem to do now, when proper design in the first place would make the amp plenty quiet. There are a lot of posts around the web and in books by 'techs' who recommend over-filtering an amp to make it 'quiter' and have 'more bass response'. I do not believe anyone recommending that is a serious player, if they were, they would immediately notice the degradation in feel of the amp from doing that. If you really want that, get a solid state amp with 2000uf or more in the power filters. For demonstration, get a 200uf-1000uf cap and put it in the first stage of your tube amp (solid state rectifier only) and see what it does. Bigger caps hold more juice, BUT they also charge much slower, they just do not feel the same. Also, a vintage Fender has overwhelming bass response into sub-aural frequencies from the circuit already, I don't know why you'd need more, and those are limited by the power amp and by the speaker anyway. What you end up getting is just stiffness. The only reason I'd ever recommend bumping up capacitance is in the rare case of ghost noting, and even then as little as possible (and I'd probably suspect the speaker long before the caps unless the caps had drifted way down).
Having said that, 2x100uf in parallel is 50uf, stock values were nominally 70uf (not available anymore) in parallel for 35uf, BUT, the over under tolerance on those stock caps was HUGE, meaning they might come in at 55uf or 110uf a piece when brand new. Personally, I use 80uf in there when I do cap jobs, but 100uf for each cap is in no way "over-filtering", it is within the tolerance of the orginal caps. When I think of 'over-filtering', I think of designers who use 100-250uf (total, not paralleled) in the first couple stages, sometimes more. I could name names but I'll refrain.
Also, there are a whole slew of reasons why a cranked Bandmaster doesn't sound like a BF Bassman, the power supply being the least of them (the phase inverter and pre-amps were very different on the Bassmans). Yes, a BF bassman had bigger iron, but that doesn't weigh in as much as the other differences. Take it from someone who has done a LOT of transformer swaps.
A BMR is probably my favorite classic Fender, along with the closely related Pro Reverb. My personal BMR has a blackface Pro Reverb circuit (minor, minor changes required to any Fender circuit except the Bassman to make that happen). Early BMRs did not have Master Volume, and on any SF Fender that DOES have master volume, it is simple to remove it, or simply leave it on 10.