In a tread in an italian forum where a guy was asking about the use of an unused 30v winding as to obtain a "balanced PI" (??? I don't understand what he was meaning)
one other member of the forum suggested to use the winding as to obtain a negative voltage and to use it as reference for the PI as to increase the dynamic (I think he mean the swing)
That is a variation of the long-tail inverter.
The bigger the tail resistance, the better the balance between outputs. In this case, the resistor has been replaced with a transistor constant-current source, which passes current but simulates a
very large resistance.
A given current for the triodes to pass, through a very large resistor, creates a very large voltage drop. You might need more total supply voltage to allow for plate resistor drop + triode voltage + tail resistor drop than what any of the other stages require. The easiest way to give the long-tail "more supply voltage" is to use the B+ and add a auxiliary negative voltage supply.
I didn't remember to have seen a similar solution applied in a guitar amp
do you think there is a chance for the negative reference of the PI to be interesting in guitar amps ??
Guitar amps never seem to strive for perfect balance; they often use relatively small tail resistances compared to, say, an oscilloscope. That said, I haven't measured a guitar inverter to see if there's any significant imbalance (a fast way to do it might be to measure the 2 outputs on a 2-channel scope, and use the scope's ADD function).
Older guitar amps don't have a negative voltage supply, other than for bias. Because the tube grids don't draw current under normal operation, the bias supply may not be capable of maintaining its voltage with significant current draw (I don't know, as again, I've never tried measuring that).
If you're interested in trying this variation in a guitar amp, then making a negative voltage supply shouldn't be too hard.