As I am understanding it .......... the first four stages of the JK amp are giving a reasonably "clean" signal ...
EDIT: The explanation below is wrong; the diodes would need opposite orientation to do what I describe below. See post further down.Look again at the diode clamp on the JK's V1B.
PRR said, "V1B grid clips/clamps at 1.36V positive but can swing negative infinity." This refers to the 1.36v of bias at V1B, and pretends the diodes aren't there. This is the point where the incoming signal's positive peak drive the grid-to-cathode voltage up to 0v, so grid-current at V1B and the tube clamping (blocking) the incoming signal.
The two diodes clamp the incoming signal in one direction. You should read "clamp" as equivalent to "clip" and don't allow the incoming signal to exceed that voltage, but only on one side of the waveform. So there's assymetric distortion at V1B's grid if you input a big enough signal at the input jack and turn up the volume control enough.
Assuming local feedback due to V1A's cathode resistor cuts gain down to 25, the clamp/clip happens at a combined input jack signal & volume control setting of 1.2v/25 = 0.048v. By that I mean if the volume is full up and a 48mV peak signal is applied to the input jack, the amp distorts at V1B's grid.
This may seem like it's no better/different than the natural blocking/clamping at/before 1.36v peak due to V1B bias. However, the diodes clamp rather than the clamping being due to grid current, so the resulting distortion shouldn't be "farty" or sound like typical blocking distortion (due to a delayed recovery from grid clamping due to grid current if no diodes were present).
If other circuit voltages were known, it might be possible to determine if the diode clamp will prevent grid blocking in later stages.
Separately, I'd call this a "3 gain stage amp" and not count the stage before the split-load inverter, since it is within the power amp feedback loop and contributes to the swing needed to drive the output tubes.