Thanks for the quick replies. 1. The current follows the tube. So I agree they are not matched....60mA verses 35mA.
Agreed.
The Bias Probe is the Hoffman kit. I'm feeding it into a Fluke 8060A multimeter (fully calibrated but the protective fuse in the current circuit is slightly undersized, read that as 1A, not the full 2A fuse it will handle).
Am I reading that you're using the amperage inputs on your meter? The whole idea behind the bias tester is that the 1ohm resistors position themselves between the cathodes and ground, or in this case, the cathode resistor, and allows reading the milliamps as millivolts. You want to read the millivolt drop on that resistor. In your case, reading the voltage on cathodes directly, and calculating the voltage dropped across the 250ohm is the most direct and reliable way to read the current drawn by the tubes, collectively. At this point, I'm not sure your readings aare reliable.
Assuming there's no serious damage issues here, is it possible the imbalance may actually be improving the tone (perhaps increasing 2nd order harmonics)?????
Anything is possible, however if your 6v6 is actually drawing 60ma at idle, it will be short lived to say the least. There are much better (read safer, more reliable) ways to get that imbalance if you feel it suits your taste.
Another note, I recently found a pair of 6L6's doing pretty much the same thing, and the run away tube was doing near nothing in contribution to the output. upon replacing the bad tube, my headroom improved and the amp was restored to it's original volume.