Nagys, your advice to just replace a rectifier tube with a diode pair is not good.
If you do that, four very bad things happen to the circuit afterwards, if it was designed for a rectifier tube.
First, the slow turn-on will be defeated and the output tubes and capacitors will be fed full bore B+ voltage before they have warmed up. This will shorten output tube life.
Second, there will be a substantial B+ voltage overshoot before the output tubes warm up and conduct, this can exceed the voltage rating of the tubes and the power supply capacitors.
Third, the sustained B+ voltage will go high because the built in voltage drop of the rectifier tube is removed. This will overbias the tubes, and likely overvoltage them too, along with power supply capacitors and other components too.
Finally, the diode set has no where near the transient line spike immunity and will short on line over-voltages that the tube rectifier can handle. This can lead to shorted power transformers and worse.
Bad, bad, bad idea, unless the amp in question was designed specifically for a solid state power supply in the first place.
By the way, doing this will void the warranty on our tube amps, and possibly simply just void the amplifier completely.

Best regards,
Frank Van Alstine