I'm certain I'm not the first person to come up with this, but i wanted to report a discovery I made recently.
We all like to crank up a tube amp. I mean, that's why we're here. I'm lucky enough to have a garage shop where I can play as loud as I want, but I find the stages I play on need to be quieter and quieter (probably why a lot of people are switching to modelers, etc). Even the 10-15 watt amps I play are frequently too loud these days. I also have attenuators, but sometimes it's nice to have a "loud" knob on the amp, so I find myself installing a master volume in most of my projects, especially where space permits.
In most cases this means some sort of post-phase-inverter master volume, as most of the designs I'm interested are low-gain enough that there's no point in attenuating twice before the phase inverter. In higher-gain designs, as outlined by Merlin and others, it is critical to put attenuating voltage dividers between preamp gain stages, but I'm finding this thinking can be extended to controlling the tone of "low-gain" designs also.
Anyways, I don’t need to extol the virtues of a master volume around here. You get it
My latest project, with a paraphase inverter, I decided to try an idea that was floating around in my head. The donor amp is a Silvertone 7350--a late 40s PA only a handful of parts away from early Fender Deluxe designs--left me with an unused control knob on the faceplate begging for a purpose. Instead of spending big bucks on a dual gang pot that would allow me to attenuate the signal going to BOTH power tubes, it occurred to me that since the second triode in the phase inverter only has unity gain (or more accurately, -1 gain), I could attenuate both phases by placing a single-gang volume knob after the first triode of the phase inverter but before the second triode. This would directly reduce the signal going the grid of the first power tube, and indirectly reduce the signal going to the other power tube--with only a single pot.
Off to the Spice I go...and find that, particularly if I use the "self-balancing" paraphase design, this single pot provides a very smooth volume sweep with very closely-balanced signals going to each power tube. I've attached the schematic and simulation below showing the signal level on each power tube grid throughout the range of the master volume.
In practice, it has proven to be a very useful control for me and extends the range of these "primitive" designs beyond their typical characteristics. I'd definitely recommend it for any designs utilizing the paraphase inverter. Obviously it's best to use a high-value pot (1M) to minimize the additional load on the first triode, but this amp has a 500k and it's working great. In my simulations, it takes a lot of tweaking to balance a standard paraphase inverter, but the "self-balancing" design with the local feedback does exactly that (this one taken straight from the Fender 5D3). Note it's also important that these two triodes have their cathodes separated, or else the second triode will get a signal from the first through its cathode and the volume control will not work.