I probably am running my test signal HOT, but I'm trying to guess what a guitar with OD, fuzz, etc "could" put out. Hopefully by spring i'll have some baseline numbers so I have some idea what to use.
Vp-p expectations of a guitar signal: it depends a lot on pick attack. with hot pickups (say Z=10K-11K humbuckers) and hard attack, you could see initial spikes around 1Vp-p, sustained 250-500mVp-p ??. of course, lower for lower output pickups and softer attack.
fuzz doesn't necessarily increase overall Vp-p. On a scope, a pedal like a univox superfuzz will show a lower total Vp-p, but it may appear to sound louder due to multiple audio waves added, all at different frequencies, some maybe square, etc.
for any effect, see the manufacturers sensitivity and gain specs (if/when they provide them). a TC Elect boost pedal boasts +26dB of gain (conveniently, they don't use "dBV" or dBu" in that spec...). put that in front of your amp, crank it up, and you might see 43Vp-p spikes at the grid of V1!
You might design the amp to sound good with guitar only, no gain pedals. you can't predict what someone will put in front of it any differently than Fender, Marshall, Fischer, or anybody else can or did (or attempted to..). Also, you don't want special switches on it that require some engineering knowledge of the circuit (like "never flip with switch with both gain and volume knobs @10).. If your amp sounds great, someone will want to borrow it, play with it, record with it, etc,, and will flip switches without special instructions.
what does V4 buy you in this circuit?