Tonegeek wrote: 
 Ok, after brushing up on some tube theory, it appears a larger plate R = more gain, although I don't understand why except in terms of less current draw across the resistor keeps the voltage higher, translating to more gain.  
 
Thinking.... 
The plate load (Rp) is the resistance that changes the AC voltage. When the tube conducts lots of current, the voltage dropped across Rp is high, when there's little current through the tube, there's little voltage drop across Rp. There's your voltage swing. 
The cathode resistor (Ck) sets the bias point of the tube. Like Scott said, typically you'd have a 66% ratio Rp to Rk. 220k/3.3k, 180k/2.7k, 150k/2.2k, 1.8k/120k, 1.5k/100k. Screwing with this ratio causes trouble. 
Jim's "more dirt" sounds like the opposite of Scott's "less clipping" so can somebody clear that up?  "More dirt" could happen if the downstream components get overloaded by the higher voltage but more gain does not necessarily mean "more dirt".  ALso, I always associated "more headroom" with less gain (and more current). Sorry if this is off the original topic, but I would like to understand these relationships better.
I really can't comment on these terms. "Dirt" as opposed to "gain" are not terms I relate to. 
One of the things I love about the Dumble tone is that it's not "over the top gain" like a SLO or 5150. The gain structure is just to the point of clipping smoothly so touch is a big part. Lighten up your touch and the tone cleans up, hit it harder and you get the organic grainy OD. 
I am still going with Y as the MF.  My new reason (completely contradicting my earlier post 
Again I can't comment, I'm on vacation with my laptop, no decent headphones or monitors in sight. Too bad, it could be a fun exercise in spite of the fact that it's not the same as hearing it live.