Thanks for pointing that out Al!
Some amplifiers are unstable with capacitive loads. I generally associate that with transistor amps (with poorly designed feedback elements), and a tube amp can have troubles too for the same reason. Changing the driver tubes to ones with less gain (12AU7) will reduce the gain of the amp and its feedback. With feedback you either want a little or a lot. I'm sure it won't hurt anything to try- at worst it will just affect the sound.
Actually this seems the simpler explanation so I am going with a basic incompatibility (amplifier instability when used UL) with this speaker. 12AU7s in place of the 12AX7s may well solve it.
Some amplifiers are unstable with capacitive loads. I generally associate that with transistor amps (with poorly designed feedback elements), and a tube amp can have troubles too for the same reason. Changing the driver tubes to ones with less gain (12AU7) will reduce the gain of the amp and its feedback. With feedback you either want a little or a lot. I'm sure it won't hurt anything to try- at worst it will just affect the sound.
Actually this seems the simpler explanation so I am going with a basic incompatibility (amplifier instability when used UL) with this speaker. 12AU7s in place of the 12AX7s may well solve it.