Re: How do tube amps work?
Third the Hunter book suggestion, great reference.
We never learned about tubes in school, so it's a great, easy read that allows you to take your solid state knowledge and apply it to tubes. It's also written in simple enough language that even with limited technical knowledge you can get something out of it.
Tagging on Darg's response:
Essentially, your pickups provide a low voltage, low current signal. The preamp had several gain stages (usually half of a 12ax7) that begin to amplify that pickup signal to a larger voltage signal. Then, depending on amp design a tone control section is either in the middle or end of the preamp. This can be passive (cut only) or active (boost and cut). With vintage amp designs, the full frequency spectrum is too harsh for our ears, so at least a treble cut (tone) is used to knock down some of that treble. This amplified and filtered signal is fed to the power amp (which could be a number of different designs... Single ended, push pull, Class A, Class AB) and depending on this, you may have a phase inverter stage. (Mirrors the signal to feed to the "pull" portion of a multi tube push/pull amp). Finally the output transformer matches the impedance of the power tubes to the speaker, and in turn converts high voltage/low current to low voltage/high current.
That's simple, leaving a lot of things out and focusing on only a few amps, but most have a similar signal flow.