I have three Blues Juniors, one regular black BJ II Mexican build circa I dunno, one BJ III tweed reissue circa 2017, and one I built originally from Hoffman's kit -- but has now been converted to a BJ4.
Each has its own flavor. The stock BJ II has lots of chime, breaks up early, and eats EL84s like candy.
The BJ III is very sweet with its improved Jensen speaker, and also ate EL84s until I lowered the bias with an add-on variable bias board. It sounds nice.
My favorite, however, is an interpretation of Hoffman's BJ but converting it to a BJ IV format -- eg, self biased power section as opposed to the fixed (and ridiculously high Fender) bias scheme in previous versions. To be clear, the variable fixed bias in Hoffman's design also fixes the problem; I wanted to see what the difference is with self biasing when I built it (frankly, not much).
My long winded point is that biasing plays a crucial role in these amps, and you can -- to a certain extent -- dial in how much early breakup your power section has by biasing cooler/hotter as you wish. Many builders just dial in the 70% Pdiss as a biasing solution. That's fine, and it works, but it's worthwhile to experiment with biasing cooler, or hotter, to see what works best for you. We do know what hotter sounds like (Fender stock BJ II, III) and of course that results in shorter tube life. Cooler can work well, and I'll often run my EL84s between 50-60% with lovely tone. It has been fun to see how low I can bias EL84s and still sound good.
I like the discussion regarding the use of a 5751 as V1 and/or reducing the plate resistor value -- that will also give you some clean "space" to play with.