thanks so much to both of you!! i just have one question:
For a driver stage, you'll want a fairly high-current preamp tube like a 12AU7 that is set up with a 30k (maximum) plate load - to get an optimal 1:5 impedance bridge with the three parallel 470k grid leak resistors.
this is something i'm unfamiliar with! i've been mostly thinking in terms of creating enough output voltage from the driver to push the 6K6's well into overdrive. currently i'm using a 12BZ7 with a 150K plate load with 240V supply. the AC loadline ends up around 70K, but i'm still getting around 140V maximum output.
i think i understand impedance bridging in theory - making the output impedance of the driver stage small in comparison with the impedance of the following stage results in maximum signal transfer. and i'm sure if i used a 30K plate resistor, the 150K grid leak of the 6K6's would hardly change the total AC load, so i can see the advantage in that respect.
but i'm worried with that small of a plate resistor, i'd be limiting the output swing, and thus limiting the max extent to which i can push the 6K6's into overdrive. i know it'll only take maybe 40 or 50V to overdrive them and that even with the 30K plate resistor i should still get at least 100V output from that 12BZ7, but this amp is centered around the power amp overdrive, and i really wanna be able to push those 6K6's until they're spitting out damn close to a square wave at maximum drive.
i'm also worried i'd be decreasing the small signal gain so much that i'd be losing touch sensitivity and increasing headroom more than i'd like, especially with a higher current (and thus lower gain) driver.
could i ask you to go into a little more detail on this one? where does this ideal impedance bridging ratio come from, and what aims does it serve? would it have any of the effects i'm concerned with?