According to
This coax loss calculator, a 150 foot run of RG8x with a 1:1 match on the antenna end, 100 watts in will get you 58.498 watts absorbed by the antenna. There is 2.32 dB of loss, all of it from the initial pass through the coax.
According to the same calculator, a 150 foot run of 450 ohm window line (which many now days is mistakenly called ladder line) into a 9:1 match (50 ohm load) on the antenna end, 100 watts in will get you 81.077 watts absorbed by the antenna. Here there is 0.911 dB of total loss, 0.221 of which is from the run through the feed line, and 0.69 is losses from the reflected power as it travels through said feed line.
That is where the op made a mistake in numbers, you can't assume the match for both feed lines of different impedances to the same load will be the same. Of course, assuming the load on the far end is (at least close to) 50 ohms, he can put another 9:1 balun over there, at which point his 95% number will be accurate... I'm only mentioning this here as he didn't say he did this.
LMR-600, with a 1:1match on the antenna side, 100 watts in will get you 87.096 watts out, which is better than the 450 ohm line with no 9:1 balun on the far end...
Ladder line, and its variants are amazing, better in many ways than coax (especially cheaper). Unfortunately it seems to be a lost art these days, which is a shame.
The DB