Where are you seeing "gain settings" on a tube amp? They’re rare. Some old tube amps had input potentiometers whereby you could adjust "input sensitivity" on each input channel (Eico, McIntosh) - technically it’s not a "gain" adjustment, but an attenuator. These were quite useful (I enjoyed their utility) - the downside being that your signal is always going though a pot of (usually) not the best quality. I guess an amp could offer a few levels of (optional) input attenuation via discrete resistors. That’s actually not a bad idea - what with modern digital sources having such strong output levels, and tube preamps plus tube power amps usually having an excess of gain.
Other than input attentation, gain is dictated by circuit design, and in most tube amps there aren’t really any good opportunities / options to change the active cricuitry’s gain without also significantly affecting sound quality or performance parameters (e.g. variable feedback). There are very few stages in a tube amp as-is, and each has a prupose, so it doesn’t make sense to add an extra stage that could be switched in/out just for gain.
Solid state amps might have more options for this, and integrated amps could offer this in their preamp stage.
Turn the pre on first, then amp. Turn amp off first, then preamp. At almost 1500 posts here - you should know that by now? Anyways, most modern components shouldn’t give a THUMP on power on/off anyways (relay protections).
Adjustable gain levels have the following utility:
- Optimize system gain structure to lower noise floor (especially relevant for systems with tube pre, tube power, and high sensitivity speakers)
- Avoid overload conditions in any one component
- Place "typical" system volume control into a more agreeable range (various reasons)
- Fine-tune system left-right channel balance (if separate L/R controls)