Regarding the Vox AC50 and AC100.....the 50 uses just the 12AU7 at the input, and guys back in the day would put an 12AX7 in place of it to wake them up as you mentioned. The true sound of those amps is with the 12AU7 though, and they can sound just fantastic with that setup. They are loud and clean with a little grit on the top....not quite AC30 territory, but a very appealing sound with lots of tonal complexity, and a more evenly balanced sound than the AC30. (AC30 being more treble freq emphasis) The 12AX7 in place gives more gain, but you lose some tone too when you do that. The 12AU7 just has a sweeter sound overall. The AC100 actually has a 12AU7 on the input, AND one as the phase inverter. These amps are very loud and cleaner than the AC50 when dimed, but they have tons of bottom (probably why they were used as a bass amp too) and are very touch responsive and chimey. I love the sound myself....listen to The Beatles "I Feel Fine" for an example. One of the best amps around for loud and clean, but harmonically rich and touch responsive too. My project one is now making around 85 watts RMS instead of the 105-115 a vintage one is supposed to get, but I think that is because my supply voltage is what the schematic says, and the real Voxes are running higher these days due to the higher AC. My PT is a Sovtek MIG 100U one made for today's wall voltages.
Buttery, would you consider graphing the phase inverter of the AC100 too with that 12AU7 in there? I'm curious what you would come up with? Keep in mind that the common schematic around for the AC100 is the later, fixed biased one that is using 47k plate resistors and a higher supply voltage. The earlier, cathode biased 80/100 amps that the Beatles used were using 220k plate loads and a lower supply voltage. I can get you the specific info if you want it....I'll have to go look it up though. The Jim Elyea book about JMI Voxes has all the info in it that you could ever want about Voxes, and has great schematics of all the amps too. My project amp is using the 220k values and lower supply voltages at this time.
In my latest Bogen project amp, I'm using a cathodyne phase inverter and I had a 12AV7 in there. I didn't have enough swing, so I changed to 100k plate loads to see what happened. With that tube. I got even less swing. While I had the 100k's in there, I swapped in a 12BZ7, thinking that the higher gain would help, and would match the 100k's better, and the lower impedance would provide more swing than the 12AX7 if I tried one. Sure enough that is the case. I get much more signal swing than with the 12AV7 and 56k loads, and the BZ swings more that the 12AX7 does too. If you used one before a tone stack, you would get less loss, and/or could use lower value parts in the tone stack to match up to the lower impedance I should think. I've read that the BZ's are often microphonic and/or defective...as in they have a higher failure rate than a 12AX7, but that they sound thicker. I'm thinking that a phase inverter spot is a good place for them because they will be less microphonic, and can drive the power tubes more, but I guess time will tell. There are a bunch of people at AX84 that have used them in projects and like them though, so there must be something to them besides the low price. :)
Greg