Well if you look on line the 7027A are 225.00 a pair the 5u4gb is 100.00 the 6sl7gt is 55.00 the 7025 is 220.00 the low one is th 6au6 at 25.00 ...
Ripoff prices. And don't get hung up on having RCA labels on everything; the label is no guarantee that RCA actually made the tubes.
Antique Electronic Supply will sell you
NOS 7027's for $63; they don't guarantee which brand you'll get, though you can call them and request a particular brand.
Also, you can take my word or not, but by the time 7027's came out, they were essentially 6L6GC guts in a different pinout with very similar ratings (by the late-60's, there was probably no difference in what was in the two bottles).
AES sells an
NOS 7025 for $44, but ask others here... you'll almost certainly not notice a performance difference between the 7025 and 12AX7 unless you use a very early 12AX7. Probably any old-production 12AX7A will give similar performance.
AES has
military 6AU6's for about $4. As someone who has nearly 1,000 old production tubes, I can tell you that even this price is higher than what you could
sell a 6AU6 for... like 12AU7's, no one seems to want them. Now if I could figure out how to convince audiophile folks to buy from me and pay the ridiculous prices some dealers charge for 12AU7's (and apparently the 6AU6 you found), I'd not have to work at least the rest of 2013, maybe 2014.
AES
5U4GB for about $19.
AES
6SL7GT for $24.
Note: If AES doesn't specify a brand, it will be old-production U.S. or European tubes from the 70's or earlier.
Regardless, if you're trying to buy a complete set of 1959 tubes from a particular brand, the sky's the limit on the price. That's because you're a motivated buyer with few options for competition or alternative vendors, and the seller will take advantage of that. I'd humbly recommend you seek other sources or expand your selection criteria to reasonable alternatives.
Maybe a poor example, but I once bought 20 flat-plate Telefunken ECC83's for $20... in a hardware store. The store owner was a ham enthusiast, and didn't gouge people on prices, especially if the item sold wasn't a vintage radio.