We make tube preamps that can drive cables of over 100 feet with ease. Further, all ESLs have widly variable impedance curves- that comes with the territory. But that does not seem to be a problem with tubes so long as the impedance does not get too low (below about 1.5 ohms @ 20KHz). See
http://www.atma-sphere.com/Resources/Paradigms_in_Amplifier_Design.php for why.
You might want to look at the link above too. That will make it easier to understand the answer, as the Voltage Paradigm has a different definition for the term 'output impedance' than seems to be used elsewhere in electronics. It is also measured in a different way. In the Power Paradigm, the output impedance is the actual impedance of the output section
and FWIW what we measure usually falls within 5-10% of what the formula predicts. So with the S-30 its about 7 ohms, the M-60 about 4 ohms, the MA-1 about 2.3 ohms, the MA-2 about 1.75 ohms and the MA-3 about 0.8 ohms.
Negative feedback is supposed to lower output impedance, but that is an example of a myth. It has no effect on actual output impedance at all.
Here is why: If an amplifier has an output impedance of X, then it can drive a certain load that will be X times Y. If the output impedance is cut in half, the amplifier output impedance would then be 1/2X and could drive a load that is 1/2(X times Y) with the same power. However in reality we find this is not true. If you have a tube amp with an output transformer that can drive an 8 ohm load with 35 watts, if you then connect it using the same tap to a 4 ohm load it will be seen to have less power. If you add feedback the power level will not increase to the level it was with the 8 ohm load, although steady-state distortion may drop.
The only way to get more power into that lower impedance is to have a different tap, or more power tubes, bigger power supplies, more heatsink area, more output transistors etc. There is something called Kirchoff's Law, which is a basic principle of electricity, which cannot be violated and is why you can't simply add feedback to get more power into a lower impedance! Thus we see that the Voltage Paradigm is using a different definition (whether admitted or not) than is seen elsewhere in the electronics industry. I use the word 'Paradigm' as those schooled in its principles will attack anything outside that platform of thought as heretical. We see that all the time in this industry- it is the source of much debate- tubes/transistors, objectivist/subjectivist, etc.