Why wouldn't you change the impedance? I mean, what would be the purpose of parallel tubes if not to gain horsepower.
I didn't design the amp (and haven't spoken to the guy who did), so strictly, I don't know.
What I see with a designer's eye is this:
- SE isn't about
more power, it's about output tube distortion at
less power (otherwise, why on earth would you need power scaling on a SE amp?).
- If more power isn't a goal, then parallel SE only makes sense if you want to
mix the sounds of dissimilar tube types, or have a small tube distorting while a big tube stays clean.
- Amp designers/builders know they can change primary impedance to get more out of the bigger tubes by swapping a speaker load to a "wrong tap" to reflect a different impedance. But designers/builders can just make their own amps, so there's no profit marketing just to that niche group.
- And since the amp will be marketing to the mass of non-technical guitar players, the goal of "plug and go" seems to be the best option.
Could you change the primary impedance and get something different out of the amp? Yeah. But even without doing that, and even with the actual output power locked-in by primary Z and B+, each tube type will bias to a different voltage with the same cathode bias resistor, and each carries a different transconductance, so the resulting response will change with each tube type. Add that true pentodes (like the EL34, EL84 and 6
K6) will distort differently than beam power tubes (6V6, 6L6, 6550, KT66, KT88), and you still get the desired bang for the tube-change buck.