Respectfully, Georges states he has a different wheel and will be installing new bearings, unless I've misunderstood something.
Chances are slim his different wheel and new bearings will offer the same preload with his original wedding band and bearing stack components. Not impossible, but doubtful.
I would recommend measuring your wedding band thickness with a quality caliper, recording it, installing the new races and lightly oiled bearings, install the bearing stack with a take-up collar, torque the axle nut to ±25 to 30 Ft-lbs and check the rolling resistance by feel. If the bearings feel loose, start hand milling the wedding band in 0.05mm increments and retrying the feel. If the bearings feel tight you will need to purchase a thicker or wider wedding band. You're after a slight amount of drag with a smooth spinning axle, and no lash or play in either a radial or axial plane.
I would also recommend inspecting your top hat spacers for wear grooves from the seal wipers. If so replace them. And I highly recommend new seals, annually or at every bearing service.
There you have two different options or schools of thought as Monte mentions on how to proceed. While the range of acceptable preload is fairly wide, it's an application I like to get right for safety and piece of mind. I depend on my wheels to hold me up and support my tires, power train, frame geometry and suspension's function.
Keep us in the loop ... happy to help if called upon.