OK, I am certainly no expert on
anything, but here's my take after crashing the party and eavesdropping. Just remember what you paid for this
opinion.
- The Vox AC30 is Cathode-biased. While it is possible to adjust the bias slightly (by substituting resistor values), there are only so many stock resistor values out there, so you cannot bias it to infinite possibilities. With no potentiometer, you get what you get.
- In a fixed-bias amplifier, hotter bias can give a little more clean headroom, but that isn't going to be night-and-day different unless the bias was really cold to begin with. And remember, hotter bias = shorter tube life. When you see a thirty-year old Deluxe Reverb with the original tubes that test good and sound great, do you think the bias was hot or not so hot?
- The tube type isn't indicitive of whether or not any amplifier is Class A, Class AB, fixed-bias or Cathode bias.
Now
the Super Champ XD is Class AB, but I haven't seen inside one to know if they have a bias potentiometer. If they do, check the bias. I have seen many, many,
many amplifiers come from the factory and on the music store floor that were biased cold. A friend bought an Ampeg Super Jet. Right out of the box. Thought something was wrong with it. I told him before he took it back (this was a Sunday), bring it over, and I'll tell him what to tell the store so he sounded intelligent about his displeasure. The 'clean' was thin and bright, and the 'dirty' was much too dirty, and not in a pleasing way. Checking the bias, the Groove Tube 6L6's were idling at something like 8mA each

. Cranking it up did the trick, and he loves the amp now. So don't think it came from the factory perfect. And 'perfect' is subjective, anyway.
For some guaranteed headroom, put 6L6's in that amplfiier. If the bias potentiometer has enough range, you'll like the results. There are other ways to get more clean headroom, but you'd have to be intimately familiar with the amplifier to know your options.