All of these designs have the tone stack feeding directly into the power tube and there is no negative feedback. Plexi and JCM800 Marshalls both have NFB returning to the phase inverter which is between the tone stack and the power tube. Having experimented with a NFB switch before, I believe that it is an important part of an amp's tone and response. OTOH the Hi Octane and other designs obviously hit the power tube with a big enough signal.
I've been working on a single-ended Plexi idea for a very long time, but this thread just triggered an idea. Could you use a concertina splitter in place of the PI and only connect the anode to your single power tube? Use the cathode for NFB insertion? Possible circuit attached.
The only question would be "What to do with the unused triode?" You could have parallel triodes for the first stage and use something lower gain than a 12AX7. Or have the "extra" triode as a switchable boost in parallel with either the first or second gain stage.
Before hitting "send" I went through my design folder to look at other ideas and came across an "AX84 Plexi SE" design. Apparently I'm not the first person to think in terms of a concertina splitter with a single output. There's a boost stage after the tone stack, a switchable LED clipper, and an interesting fixed/cathode bias switch. I'm not sure why, but the AX84 designers seem to be allergic to NFB.
The other SCH file is my NOT-built design so far. If you use ExpressSCH, this file might be helpful as a starting point regardless of whether or not the design actually works. Note that this circuit shows a different approach to the psuedo-PI, basically dumping signal through two voltage dividers: one before the grid and the second a split plate resistor.
This probably just muddies the water, but at least the SCH file might be useful.
Cheers,
Chip