ok... just to back track a little. I am an Electrical Engineer.. so, I understand fully PCBs, components, OEM rework, and hack jobs. This, in all obviousness, was a complete hack job... and not standard rewiring or engineering changes to the board. All kind of extra caps and resistors soldered to the top and bottom side of the board to vias, and heavy gauge wire running amuck. I removed all of this, back to stock, replaced all the caps... and it worked pretty well. A year later, after i made my crucial mistake of no iso transformer, the board blew many traces and more than likely blew more than enough parts on this already pretty abused (and likely tired) board for me to even bother tracking down. It was certainly easier to replace the board with a new one that has the same specs and a couple more dials than to waste months of parts ordering and tracking down.
All that said, i understand that it is desired to keep the original board as it is well designed. I can attest to that... my replacement seems to work (ok)... although i am not done configuring it yet. However, the wei ya has some tradeoffs that i prefer even to a possibly better working all around original "Wells" board.
I'd love to get this board running as well as the previous... but this one already is showing signs of improvements in some areas.
I recall the other board having a 50/60hz pot... that maybe i tweaked a bit to correct the top of the screen problem. Additionally, i am hoping a video amp will solve the color problems.
Thanks all for your suggestions!

I guess ill just find out next week when the parts come in.
-Steve