Gents - heater supply question.
The transformer I'm getting for my amplifier is the 
Hammond 273BX.
I'm wiring my 12AX7/12AU7 tubes with 12.6V and my 6L6GC's with 6.3V. I read from Merlin's book an artificial center tap referenced to a DC source (for DC elevation) will help reduce heater hum. 
In my diagram, I've put a humdinger on the 12.6V terminals and the 6.3V terminals, with the idea that it should help reduce the noise for the 6L6GCs on the 6.3V. However, I suspect that there won't be enough heater noise on those tubes to need it, so I may remove it. 
As for the 12.6V humdinger - since there is already a center tap on the transformer, is this even necessary? If I attach the center tap directly to a DC source such as the cathode of the 6L6GC (I'm cathode biased), would this accomplish the same DC elevation as putting in a humdinger and connecting the center tap of that to a DC source (see attached file, sticky note on the right)? However, I'm also running heaters at 6.3V, and connecting it this way would leave a DC voltage across the whole filament - probably bad.
Thoughts?
Edit: a follow up question. In my attached schematic I've placed a bleeder resistor on every smoothing capacitor as well as the reservoir. I've also seen designs out there where only the reservoir has a bleeder resistor. I assume that the more resistors, the faster the power supply capacitors can discharge because more parallel paths reduce the circuit's time constant. However, these resistors are effectively in parallel with the plate resistor/tube resistance/cathode resistance, so they should be made large so that most of the current does not go through the bleeder resistor while the amp is on. Does that logic check out?
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