... OP is free to bias like he want.
Of course.
Just consider that:
- Everything from 0% idle (Class B) to 100% idle (Class A) is the range of operation we call "Class AB."
- The key difference between Class A & Class B is how large Peak Plate Current rises, as a % of idle current.
- Class A can't (cleanly) exceed 2x idle current.
- Class B is many-many times (non-zero) idle current
- The point of Class B (and the cooler end of the Class AB spectrum) is to cool the plate because the high peak currents tend to overheat it.
- So amps producing much more output power (higher peak current) need to cool longer; they should idle cooler than lower-power (Class AB) amps.
At another forum, someone asked about idling the 6L6GCs in a MusicMan amp to 40%. This was rejected (and would be counter to MusicMan's instructions), as the tubes run in Class B2 to deliver 65w from a pair of 6L6GC. They
have to be cool-idling to avoid overheating when things get loud.
As for the subject Custom Vibrolux Reverb, the original 25mA (35%) was probably smaller than necessary, but that idle bias would have varied with the tubes used (they don't all land on the same plate current when fed the same bias voltage). Here Leevi could idle hotter. He could scope the amp for max clean output power & bias the amp where most-power is achieved (if max clean output power is a goal). Or he could bias hotter for earlier output tube distortion, as long as no redplating is observed. And there are other ways to solve the problem.
In this case there is not any idea to bias the amp to 70% level. Deviation grom the Fender factory setting would be too high. Currently it is set to 35%.
That's not necessarily the "factory setting."
I have a tube tester that check idle current, as well as transconductance (and other measurements). For one test condition, "ideal plate current" is considered to be 72mA, with an acceptable range of 58-86mA (see Page 2 of
this 6L6GC data sheet, left-column of "Class A Amplifier, Pentode Connection"). This tester allows setting of plate, screen & bias voltages to exactly replicate the data sheet condition.
When I tested ~30 6L6GCs, they fell in a range from 60-88mA.
But I had a pair of American made 6L6WGBs that I consider "defective." In the same test with the same fixed bias, these tubes idled at 132-140mA! I tried running them in an amp, and had to set the bias supply for its maximum-negative voltage just to keep these tubes in the "way too hot" range.
Point? When you see tubes with stickers for matching showing Plate Current as well as Transconductance, it's because the idle current for a tube when voltages are applied varies among tube samples. It could be that your present tubes simply have low plate current for the applied voltages. Tell me your actual Pin 3,4, 5 voltage, and I'll tell you how that 25mA compares to other 6L6s.