... what rare virtues of the 12BY7 would have caused H K, & Carver, to choose them? ...
... the 12BY7 seems to have better linearity over other typical "preamp" pentodes. so on technical merits, perhaps for lower distortion?
OTOH, there are triodes that exhibit much better linearity ...
Harmon Kardon Citation II Service ManualHK tells you first-thing on Page 2 of the Service Manual: wide bandwidth & low distortion.
Why? They wrap feedback around the entire amp. They also talk about using an amount of feedback close to a limit imposed by stability in the amp (which is related to frequency-response roll-offs of items inside the loop). HK makes a big deal about frequency response wider than the range of hearing, and touting an output transformer with very wide bandwidth.
See, feedback reduces distortion & widens bandwidth. Except you get "more bang for your feedback buck" if the basic amplifier has "low distortion & wide bandwidth" before the feedback is applied (it gets more-better after applying feedback).
So it seems HK felt cost/power-hungry-nature were acceptable tradeoffs if very wide bandwidth before (and after) feedback was a key goal. The point of all that is to keep listening artifacts minimal in the audio range.
The 12BY7 pentode is more-gain than using a triode (which means ore feedback can be used and still drive the output tubes). Using a wasteful, high-plate-current power tube as a preamp tube enabled low-Ω plate load resistors, moving the treble roll-off frequency higher (as it works against output capacitance, that was also lowered by having a pentode). All about that wide-bandwidth thing.
... Has anyone used this as a guitar preamp or PI? What would the pro's and cons be of using this in a geetar amp ...
It's
A Sound, but it might not be an
Exciting Sound.
Have you ever played a guitar through a
very clean hi-fi, or similar? If you have, you'll notice how "guitar amp clean" usually has some amount of distortion before it's "obviously distorted" that you never noticed until it was compared to "stark clean." You may also find your guitar's pickups don't sound as good as they do in more-colored, more-distorted amps.