> both the preamp and power amp by using two ECL86s
Doubtful.
You have two power pentodes. Each needs about 10V peak or 7V RMS drive. You probably want to work push-pull. You should use a push-pull driver. With two triodes the best you can do is a high-gain volt-amp follewed by a cathodyne. Gain to each grid will be 70 at best. The input sensitivity is about 7V/70 or 0.1V or 100mV RMS. Guitar amps typically have input sensitivity of 50mV to 5mV. You need another gain of 2 to 20.
Maybe the most direct "cheat" is to use a small MOSFET as the cathodyne. Then you have two triodes' worth of gain which is more than ample.
Alternatively you could sneak a JFET in as the first stage. Well-done it has less hiss and hum than a typical tube. And the distortion can be "similar" to a tube.
The only push-pull commercial amp with just two triodes as pream/driver is the small Fender bass amp. It used an interstage transformer to get phase split. It has some collector appeal, mostly I think because it was so mediocre that it didn't sell well when new and is now slightly scarce. The interstage transformer was custom and not easily emulated. And transformer-driven guitar amps have rarely been as popular as cap-coupled drivers.