Re: What makes an All Tube amp ?
Isn't there a JCM900 that has clipping diodes in the signal path for more distortion?
yep. there are actually lots of amps that use that kind of configuration.
To the OP: there is really no such thing as all tube. Every amp need lots of other stuff including resistors, capacitors, wire, cabinets etc. I this sounds facetious but its true. So what this means is the term "all tube" is just marketing jargon and everybody has their own definition of what "all tube" means.
Some might say an all tube amp needs tubes in the preamp as well as the power amp. However, what if they have solid state rectification? Is that an amp that is no longer "all tube"? What about mesa boogies where you can switch rectifiers?
Many modern marshalls and other high gain amps have diode clipping circuits to get high levels of distortion with reliable running. Does employing clipping diodes make the amp no longer "all tube"?
How about amps that claim to have a tube preamp...but that it is really just one 12ax7, with the rest of the gain stages made up using transistors?
How about amps with no clipping diodes and a pair of tubes in the preamp, but a solid state phase inverter before hitting the power tubes?
Anyways....there is no such thing as "all tube". It just comes down to what each tube in an amp does, and how the amp sounds to your ears.
I have found that even some classic amps such as a 5e3 or princetons can be improved by replacing the tube recitfier with an ss circuit. In the end it comes down to taste and how the amp feels when you play it.
If you want to get as close as possible to the concept of "all tube" you have to look at the job of what tubes do, which is more or less the same job as what transitors do. So i guess the closest you can get to "all tube" would be an amp that only has tubes, and no transistors anywhere in the circuit.
Whatevs man...don't get too hung up on it. You need other things apart from tubes to make an amp work, so play a few and trust your ears.