PL84 is EL86 with different heater. Which sure appears to be a high-current EL84.
It's a V-scan TV sweep tube, also audio output (V-scan is a 50Hz ramp-wave, must have overtones past 5KHz--- "audio".)
170V is a "Typical Operation". That's what you get in a basic TV set (in europe).
250V is the Design Center max rating in TV service. Design Center can be exceeded 10%-20% if you know your voltages. And TV service is usually very derated from where we can run audio amps. A TV sweep runs max all the time, and a slight misadjustment can be a large increase of stress. Speech/music amps don't run flat-out for long.
380V and 25W is well above the maker's suggestions. However the makers sometimes didn't tout all the possibilities, steering bigger applications to higher price tubes. But when cornered, and teased with a big order for an under-sold tube, they'd work with a maker to find the outer limits of performance and profit.
Ah!! 400V 24W is the suggestion for 7189. Which IS an EL84 only rated 400V.
I suspect the "250V" spec was a CYA number in case they ever had to use the cheap plate-stuff. But when pressed, they admitted they never had to use the cheap stuff. Many EL84 survive 400V all day long (only if biased cool! not cathode-bias). If you needed a 400V number, you paid for 7189. Apparently Hohner felt safe using PL86 at the higher voltage.