Almost all tetrodes need neutralization. It's the nature of the gain. I've also built single sweep tube drivers (grid driven) driving 3-500s before. It was JUST about as much of a PITA as building 4-400s... Actually, the 4-400 as a tetrode is BETTER than an 8950 or 6??6 driving a 3-500. Cheaper, in the long run, as 4-400s are PLENTIFUL as broadcash pulls.
The problems where with operators that where blowing up tubes, or from the guys that wanted to swap out the 4CX250s for 350s or 300s. I even had one come back with F series tubes (they had swapped the sockets out with the coaxials, but forgot they ran on 26 volts). CBers are a CHEAP lot, even the 'big money guys', for the most part.
As Shockwave pointed out, you can nearly count all the broadcash tetrodes on 11 meters with 1 hand.... That's a bit off today, there's been a LOT of tets being built, BUT for the most part, it IS true. If you want to hear a REALLY good one, listen to 766. His is a good tetrode. Another thing most of the tetrode runners WON'T tell you is this: They NEVER go off frequency. They might as well have a crystal controlled exciter on 27.025. If they do, they don't run the biggins when they do... Hence you hear the guys on 11 talkin about runnin their baby drivers (talkin on the OLD pumphouse, before they bought the tet, while the tetrode cools or warms up).
And no, I was talking about converting a SB220 to a PAIR of 4-400s. HOWEVER, I also build SINGLE 4-400 boxes when I get enough parts. They make AWESOME drivers! 20 in, 700 or more out (depending on the emission left in the tube, I get all broadcash pulls).
In the SB220 conversions, you leave the drive configured at the cathode (into the filaments). You ground the CONTROL grid (the 'grid' in the triode) directly to the chassis. THEN, apply voltage through the chokes you REMOVED from the grids in the SB220 to the SCREEN of the 4-400. If you have a variable or variac'ed 150-200 volt supply, all the better, you can use it as dial-a-gain! (This is NOT something I recommend, however.... Just figure out how much voltage you need, and get a supply built for THAT voltage!!!) HOWEVER, make SURE you "AC ground" the screen grid by using the bypass caps from the control grid (remove the caps and the coils from the control grid, move them to the screen grid. Install the cap JUST as you removed it, but instead of going to ground on the choke, you tie the POWER SUPPLY end of the two chokes together (V1 and V2), and then out to a low impedance voltage source).
If your in the 'planning' stages, get a YC156 and a 400 watt driver, that's capable of operating at 225 or so watts. Problem solved. That, currently, is my favorite tube.
OR, you can ALSO go with the 4CX5000. Mine, 140 watts in, 14 thousand out. I can PUSH it to 22 thousand (low bands, about 18 on '10'), but the distortion is pretty bad. At 14 thousand to 14 and a half, it's clean as a whistle. It's run as a TRUE tetrode, though.
When I ran it as a grounded grid/screen triode, it took (IIRC) about 3500 in for the same 22 thousand out. I generally ran it about 12. The 4CX5000 has a 6Kw anode on it, an indestructable screen (especially if you go with the R version), and is socketed (sockets are FRIGGIN expensive!!!).
Another thing you can do is buy the 3CX10,000 box, and unless he's building it with the B series tube, it will have a socket in it... You can trade off the 10,000 and get a 5K for it, and get a few dollars in the process. Drop the tube in, and with a SERIOUS minimal amount of retuning, it should be back up and running. Just make SURE you match the filament voltages!!!! Not all tubes are the same fil V, even if they use the same socket!.
Seriously, though, where I in your position, I'd use the SB200 in LOW, underdrive the HELL out of it with a peaked up radio, and run a YC156. 10Kw +++ capabilities (I've seen 15 out of a single, but the V was pretty high, and we conditioned the tube for DAYS to debarnicle it).
8877, YC156, YC179, 3CX800s. All triodes that have the GAIN of a tetrode. And ALL of them run on (relatively) low plate volts!
--Toll_Free