Perhaps it's the preamp voltage levels that make tubes sound more similar than in a Marshall, Mesa or other lower preamp voltage amps? Maybe it's not so much the brands that matter in a SLO, but the plate structure might cause harmonic emphasis changes regardless of the voltage? FI, a long plate IE, Tungsram, JJ, Sovtek etc may still have more low end emphasis than any short plate tube at the same voltage. That's were the spectral balance, clarity and sweetness might be noticed. Have you ever compared a full set of long plate preamp tubes to a full set of short plates in a SLO? I suspect the difference might be pretty obvious at the same gain tone stack settings, but not as obvious on the OD channel. AFAIK, raising the voltage supply decreases distortion and compression, but a full set of mushy sounding Sovtek preamp tubes may still sound quite different in an SLO than a set of RCA's at the same voltage, even at the same relative gain. Crappy mushy sounding tubes are also much less likely to handle higher voltages well. Certainly old tubes are better quality, but 5 good ANOS/NOS preamp tubes can be more than $200. If it doesn't matter that much, why not just get the cheap JJ's I suggested and/or 9th gen Shuguang for ~$70? They should still last many years, no?
All that being said, I can see the value in sourcing some GE 6B5Q for as much as ~$100/pair, when TheTubeStore PS EL84/7189 cost ~$70/pair and may not last very long. I noticed that The Valve Queen is selling the long plate NOS IE brand 12ax7 for $25. Seems like worth grabbing a few for PI use while they are still available -- probably better quality and richer sounding than the JJ ECC803S.
P.S. JC does offer an OT upgrade for their ~20W amps to be back in stock in under a month here:
https://reverb.com/item/3139985-bulldog ... 3cadhVccwA
That Classictone is probably equally great for less cash, but it might require drilling screw holes. The stock JC 20W OT is actually just 3.6k Ohms, so you could choose something around that value from Classictone if you don't want any high end reduction. My understanding is that higher primary impedance tightens the bass as well as reduces distortion & high end. Check this video comparison of the stock 20W 3.6k OT to an 8.4k Hammond OT. The smaller Hammond OT doesn't seem to have less bass than the stock OT, but it's hard to tell:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiNuXPGiVaM
Hammond are actually very good and inexpensive. They may have some more power and impedance options at this point. I think that video shows that the low impedance stock OT is a big reason the amp is very bright. I'd at least change the OT and try a few different tubes, even if you trade for the 22WH. Just follow standard tube amp safety precautions, and solder the existing wires accordingly. Someone here might even be willing to check your work from pictures just to make sure it's OK b4 you try it out?