Is it OK to use an 8 Ohm tubed amp to power 16 Ohm speakers?


There’s a lot of emotion and conflicting answers when I Google this. I have an Air Tight ATM-1s and Zu Audio Druid speakers. The Air Tight is factory-set at 8 Ohms and is switcheable to 16 Ohms but requires removing the base plate and resoldering which I’m reluctant to do — or at least not until listening at the current configuration. Air Tight says it’s fine to have 8 Ohm to 16 Ohm speakers — which I suppose is definitive, but I’m asking the question all the same to this experienced community. Btw, I am not an electrical engineer so please don’t be overly technical in your opionions.

Many thanks.
ijloffsite
It is always better to have a higher load resistance - less current is drawn from tube circuits. Compared to transistor amps, tube amps are challenged by low impedances and have difficultly in providing current.
Air Tight is right, trust them. You could try the16 ohm tap on your amplifier and compare the sound to the 8 ohm. It’s possible you may prefer one over the other. That’s a sonic/sound character choice. However either speaker tap is certainly safe and acceptable to use.
Charles
There is no chance of physical harm to either the amp or the speaker to use any tap on a tube amplifier, so it is worthwhile experimenting to see which sounds the best.  One combination may sound good under one set of circumstances, but not another (e.g., one one combination might run out of gas earlier than another so it would not be as good when required to play loud, but, it may otherwise sound better).  

If you actually do have an unusually high impedance speaker, an amp with an unusual 16 ohm tap might offer a theoretical advantage.  I presume that 16 ohm tap means a smaller turn ratio in the output transformer which may mean better sound.  Again, it is a "may" because you might prefer the slightly better bass control and smoother frequency balance of using the 8 ohm tap instead (higher damping factor).  Again, when you have the time to make the internal switch, just try it.
Roger Modjeski of Music Reference recommends using the lowest tap that gives you enough power for your speakers (almost all tube amps put out less power as impedance descends). He calls this "light loading". You can use the 8, 4, or 2 ohm tap for 16 ohm speakers, and the 4 or 2 ohm tap for 8 ohm speakers, but not the opposite (taps higher than the speaker’s nominal impedance). The lower the tap, the higher the damping factor and the lower the distortion, generally speaking.