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KCL and KVL, ... techniques I am used to doing.Then you are exceptional in this crowd.
The problem with these basics (which must be mastered) is they assume linearity. Superimposed currents do a simple thing, etc. Vacuum tubes are non-linear. To a fair approximation, current rises as 1.5 power of voltage. Well, 1.2, 1.6, it varies. And then look at the lower-left of 12AX7 curves where something else is happening.
I can't find it now, but one of the early Bell papers on thermionic devices concluded that (hand) calculation was not useful because of nonlinearity.
Kuehnel's 5F6a book rather confirms this. He sets up matrixes and solves them in a way which was impractical before computers. (I'm not seeing this in the 3rd edition; did he drop it?)
Plotting on curves is the time-honored way to estimate tube operating point. With enough lines you can extract voltage gain and signal impedances; with enough eraser you can check for trouble with supply and resistor variations.
A modestly useful guide is
Graphical Constructions for Vacuum Tube Circuits www.tubebooks.org/Books/Preisman_graph.pdf Chapter I outlines the problem of analysis of circuits with nonlinear elements. Natch the rest shows how good-enough answers may be derived from available graphs. Not only for "normal amplifiers" which are not very nonlinear, but even for the Dynatron and its sharp breaks (which tend to blow-up simple analysis, even SPICE can choke if not eased over the discontinuities).
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making sure a circuit is stable under feedbackThat seems rather different than what your post asked? IAC, amplification and phase are all the same whether we use transistors, tubes, horses, or tiny demons. (Feedback theory really starts with steam engine flyball governors, though with electronics we have more choice/control of values and so the theory got very deep.)
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I don't like the idea of running typical 470k grid resistors in high gain amps just because everyone else is, without testing the merit of the idea.What difference does it make??
Well, all grids leak, so a real-high grid resistor will bias-up somewhere other than where we expected for Vg=0. Many specs give a "Max" value which is not likely to foul-up a self-bias design. Some tables suggest grounded cathode and a very large (10Meg) Rg, "using" grid leakage to make bias. Turns out this is fairly stable for healthy triodes with large plate resistors.
OTOH, a very low Rg will load-down the previous stage. You should remember that "gain is cheap" but just throwing it away does no good. Rg should be significantly larger than the driving stage output impedance.
And of course since Rg is most of the impedance, it directly figures on the size of coupling cap. And in bulk, 0.01 is cheaper than 0.02. Since essentially all audio companies eventually go broke, saving the pennies is sound wisdom.
But in many cases, 330K or 1.5Meg (with according cap values) is all the same.