I pretty much agree with you, Kevin. I have both GEC's as well as the Stradi. I have tried quite a few 5U4G's, both old and new stock--most of them fall way below these two. My next recommendation would be the 5U4G and 274b from Sofia Electric. They are both excellent and actually work interchangeably in a 5U4G slot. BTW, the SE 274B has indeed been designed to work in most 5U4G slots, unlike the discussion and questions about it earlier in this thread. I dialogued a good bit with Sue from Sophia Electric after some of the previous discussion, plus spent a good bit more time with these tubes. A typical 5U4G has a 3A filament. Traditionally, the 274B's filament is a 2A. However, the SE 274B has a 2.8A filament, not an insignificant difference. And as Cellcburn mentioned earlier, the SE 274B was designed for a first power supply capacitor up to 47uf, so was designed to handle a broad spectrum of the 5U4G demands. It produces a very different, rich sound from many 5U4G's, including their own version at Sophia Electric. Both their 274B and 5U4G are very good and which sound you prefer would depend on where you put them in a chain and the type of speakers/room, etc. They all can "tone" the sound in the direction that might best compliment the whole.
Currently, I'm running a pair of matched GEC U52's in a pair of 300B monoblocks alongside a pair of 300B Tsakatsuki's. I have a/b sampled both the Tsakatsuki's and the Western Electrics. The former were much better for my setup and the GEC's compliment them very well. I have a Stradi in the DAC. The Stradi comes closest to the GEC sound, a little closer than the SE's. It is quite neutral, never harsh, clean at top and bottom, good detail and not overly colored. But the SE's might compliment better in some systems. Sometimes I will change the Stradi for one of the Sophia Electrics. The sound is different but still very musical and will bring out something different. I haven't had the opportunity to try a pair of the Stradi 300B's, but am curious about how they would figure in this! Stradi is definitely going in a good direction and I imagine will become the go-to valve for many.