The thing is, the power amp is always running wide open. Changing the preamp tube doesn't change that, nor does adjusting the volume control. All those do is change the signal that the preamp is sending to the power amp.
Yes, but sending less signal to the output stage can drive it less hard, and not saturate as much. I agree that it's not a radical difference between the different V1 tubes being discussed, but I think you can get different tonal flavors from rolling tubes.
However; it isn't always so simple. Amps are designed with certain gain parameters, and just swapping tubes, while IMO generally harmless fun with preamp novals, isn't as cut and dry as some may think.
To
properly utilize a different tube(s), the entire circuit needs to be optimized for those characteristics.
IMO unless you are prepared/capable to take those measures, generally an amp will perform
best when using the tubes that the designer designed the circuit around. From input to output an amp is (hopefully) designed to work in synergy, with
all of its parts playing their role, and it’s a delicate balance to actually get it “right”.
Different tubes have different tonal qualities for sure, but if you want
cleaner, back off the volume control. There isn’t a magic “plug in” fix, and just by rolling
much lower gain tubes through V1 you can actually get things real sludgy.
I think anything lower gain than a 12AT7 is really pushing the design envelope, as I mentioned before my AT7 experiment ended up with me swapping back to the
proper tubes.