Those two tubes are are too dis-similar to get optimal performance out of both with a single circuit (even with a bias adjust). You'll get good results out of one, or the other, .. or neither!a few other reasons the tubes can't be interchanged in a circuit without disappointing results from one or the other tube:- an output transformer impedance will be optimal for an el84 @ 300V won't be optimal for an el34 @ 300V (and vice versa).
- optimal screen voltage for either tube @ 300V won't be the same.
Also, the 300V B+ ought to be mentioned: if you survey circuits of great soundin
I have taken that into account in my tests
You haven't told us the complete test conditions; the schematic only shows a single output tube.
Load (primary) impedance of the OT? Bias voltage across the cathode resistors of each tube?
Preliminary guess is you have a load impedance suitable for the EL84, so the EL34 won't make any additional output power over what the EL84 will do. If the EL34 bias voltage is also higher, then it takes a bigger drive signal to do the same-thing the EL84 did with less drive signal.
This is all saying what Terminalgs is saying, but a different way.
I think it might have something to do with the amplification factor of the tubes.
or tranconductance?
/Leevi
We don't have apples-to-apples data for the
EL84 and
EL34, but Gm for both is reasonably close to 11mA/V for either tube. Catch is your screen-to-plate bypass cap puts the output tube in semi-triode mode. Interestingly, the EL84 shows more Gm in this condition than the EL34. So that's a piece of the puzzle.
Amplification factor is mu from G1 to G2, and has application to triode mode but is mostly about bias of a pentode. The EL84's higher triode amplification factor means for a given screen voltage, it will take less G1 voltage to bias the tube. This also implies the EL84 will require less drive signal to reach its full output power (-12v bias can only accept a 12v peak signal, or less, before significant distortion where -35v bias will require a 35v peak signal to reach the limit of its output capability).
Last piece of the puzzle is OT primary impedance and the load presented to the tube(s) and power supply. A load that is suitable to get ~6w from a 12w tube with 300v B+ will allow a 25w tube to make only ~6w as well. 2x tubes will still only do ~6w total; you have to raise the B+ (impractical) or lower the load impedance (mismatch speaker load to marked tap to lower reflected primary impedance) to allow the bigger tube or pair of tubes to make more output power.
Distortion also makes a tube sound "louder" and "brighter".
You might consider a Master volume control for each tube, if you haven't done so already, to control the individual drive to and contribution from each output tube.