Sorry PRR , I must desagree with you .
EL 84 socket pins 1,6, 8 are not connected to the tube, so we can use it to tie points. Jeff is right.
You might be able to use the pins as tie points, but it is bad practice. Murphy's Law ensures you will find out why it is bad practice as soon as you drop a
$230 pair of NOS 6550's in your "swallows all octal tubes" amp that uses cathode bias.
On most octal output tubes of the 6L6/6V6/6550 class, pin 1 is not used. In the EL34, pin 1 is the suppressor, and must be physically connected to the cathode at pin 8. In general, many amp builders might tie pin 1 to pin 8 even in a 6L6 amp, just to be universal and allow the option of EL34's later.
Being a conscientious builder, you probably included some spring-type tube clamps that grip the bases of the tubes to keep them firmly in the socket. But the
GE 6550 could have pin 1 not connected, or it could be connected to the metal shell around the base. Since your amp is cathode biased,
and you strapped pin 1 to pin 8, the cathode of the tube is essentially connected to the shell if you have bad luck.
Your luck gets even worse, as that spring clamp is bolted to the chassis. That also means the cathode is connected to the chassis, which is probably grounded. As a result, your cathode resistor is shorted, and your expensive 6550's now have zero bias. They quickly redplate and melt.
Note that the data sheet said "S/NC" which means that pin 1 could either be connected the base shell, or connected to nothing, purely at the manufacturer's convenience.
You might be right to assume that "unused pins" could be used as tie points. You have a better chance of being right if the pins are simply not present on the tube's base (as is common in 5U4 rectifiers). But some manufacturers will add the extra (supposedly unused) pins to offer more stability in the socket. Are you
sure you know they're not connected to anything in the tube? How about in the latest Chinese knockoff of a 50 year-obsolete tube, such as we commonly use?
The point is, while commonly seen, it's "best practice" to avoid any connection to those pins.