I can confirm both amps sound fantastic with my 4 ohm speakers; no idea if the tubes will last longer because of the "reduced maximum output" or if other factors are in place.
@mclinnguy There is. Its the load on the power tubes, which is transformed by the transformer to the speaker impedance. So if you cut the speaker load to 1/2 by putting a 4 Ohm load on an 8 Ohm tap, the result is the power tubes see a load that is 1.2 of what they are designed for.
This will cause increased distortion, lower power and shorter tube life. Might sound fine but it would sound better if the load on the transformer were correct.
@immatthewj If the best sound quality out of a tube amp is your goal then it is best to avoid lower impedance speakers. This is particularly true if the amp uses no feedback.
The lower impedance makes the speaker cables far more critical. They should be heavier gauge and also shorter for best results. Output transformers with a 4 Ohm tap tend to be less efficient than when they are driving 8 or 16 Ohm on the correct tap; the use of 4 Ohms can easily reduce the low frequency bandwidth by an octave. The transformer can often run warmer too and all that heat is amplifier power warming it up due to the (slightly) reduced efficiency.
All amplifiers make more distortion driving lower impedances. For this reason alone IMO 4 Ohms is a Bad Idea since keeping distortion down helps with reproducing low level detail and the like.