Uh, there's a letter "s" in the middle of
www.tubesplus.com
See if that works any better.
The diagram is posted free at
www.cbtricks.com. Click on "Amp Info" up top, then on "Kris" in the sidebar window. Both GIF, JPG and PDF versions are currently there to download.
It doesn't say which tubes are used on the schematic, that was from memory. The larger, and more expensive 6MJ6 version of the final tube tends to last longer, but they are harder to find every year that goes by. The 6LQ6 is a bit less stout, but cheaper and easier to come by.
The HR2510 only has one final transistor, but it's rated for just about exactly twice what the final used in a legal 40-channel CB delivers. That radio is kinda large for that amplifier.
One thing that is likely to help is called a "swamping" resistor. It gets placed in parallel with the input to the driver tube. The radio's drive power is split between the resistor and the driver tube, reducing the strain on it.
For that model, it takes more than just a resistor. You need a capacitor in series with it.
A 500-Volt or 1000-Volt ceramic disc capacitor, .05 uf or .047 uf, more or less, gets one lead to pin 3 on the driver tube's socket. One end of a 100-ohm 5-Watt (NOT wirewound) resistor goes to the free end of the disc cap. The other end of the resistor goes to ground, preferably near to the driver socket.
This also brings down the input SWR that you'll see on the radio's internal SWR meter. A 68-ohm or 82-ohm resistor may bring the input SWR down a bit more, but you'll need to use a larger size than 5 Watt if you reduce its resistance value below 100 ohms.
The date on the schematic is 1971. When that amplifier was designed, a "normal" tube-type CB would push a 3 or 3.5-Watt carrier, and no more than 16 or 18 Watts peak on AM modulation. Solid-state radios in 1971 seldom showed more than around 14 or 15 Watts PEP on SSB.
The 2510's transmitter is roughly twice the size of a 'normal' early-70's 23-channel CB radio.
The 2510 by itself delivers nearly as much as the driver tube does, feeding the two finals. Somebody (else) should post a "bypass" procedure to eliminate the driver tube. It would probably give you 75% or 80% as much with the 2510 driving the two finals directly, as it does with the driver tube.
73