The oscillator needs a gain of 27 to work. With 220k and 10k the no-LED gain is 22, minus other losses, so should fade quick. At 470k:10k the apparent gain is 47; won't be that high but if it comes to gain of say 25 the oscillation will fade slow.
I'm not sure that there is any "upper limit" on the "10k". 100k may idle fine and fade quick.
Obviously you know what you are looking at, but for benefit of others with less insight it might be interesting to know if the "10k" may be large and die more reliably/quickly.
I must be calculating the gain for the 470K/10K combo wrong because I keep getting 30. I tried a couple of tubes in real life and observed a gain of 20.
I don't have any particular 10K fetish, it's just that it worked well in a source-follower design. I have noticed that the 10K shunts enough current to adversely increase the minimum VTL5C1 output resistance with wimpy VTL5C1's. A 47K cathode resistor seems to be acceptable as far as output resistance goes and it stops the oscillation quite rapidly when the LED is disconnected.
It has crossed my mind that the sudden change in current might cause a pop when the pedal is toggled on and off. If this is a legitimate concern, it would argue for the smallest cathode resistor feasible to keep the current difference as small as possible. I would have to install this in an actual amplifier to see if any problem really exists.
If you are really, really concerned about shutting down the oscillation, you could also switch out one or two of the RC phase shifters.